Aspen Times Weekly: May 10 edition

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WINEINK CHARDONNAYS YOU SHOULD NOT IGNORE 17 || A&E A WHORE, SOME HEAT AND THE NBA PLAYOFFS 20

MAY 10-16, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

FIND IT INSIDE

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

THE DEPARTMENTS ARE DIALING IT IN SEE PAGE 24


BELLY UP ASPEN WHERE ASPEN GOES FOR LIVE MUSIC.

STAFF PLAYLIST ERIN NOETHEN

SALES/MARKETING DIRECTOR

t #"-5*.03& #-6&4 /0 DEER TICK t t -07& 8*-- 4"7& :063 406(3061-07& t t CRAZY FOR YOU BEST COAST t

WED 5/9

SHOW 8:30 PM FEAT. JOE TATTON OF THE NEW MASTERSOUNDS, JOSHUA FAIRMAN OF KINETIX, AND ERIC LOW & JAMES DUMM OF THE FOX STREET ALL STARS

RODINA

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W/ THE OAKCREEK BAND NO COVER

FRI 5/11

SAT 5/12

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DEER TICK

SHOW 10 PM

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W/ SALLIE FORD AND THE SOUND OUTSIDE

“Deeply-layered opus of slow-building & timeless rock’ n’ roll� - Paste Magazine

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THU 5/10 SHOW 9 PM

SUNSPOT JONZ OF LIVING LEGENDS t "$&:"-0/& 0' PROJECT BLOWED W/ JNATURAL & DJ TAM

MON 5/14 SHOW 9:30 PM

JANTSEN

Colorado native producer/DJ that has collaborated with dub step greats Bassnectar & PropaTingz.

NO COVER

JUST ANNOUNCED:

WED 5/16

TUE 5/15

SHOW 8:30 PM

SHOW 9 PM

GOOD GRAVY

“Rambles between bluegrass, jam, electronica & world music like a hillbilly Phish fan at a Zambian nightclub!� - Scene Magazine

NO COVER

MISHKA & ANUHEA

W/ MICAH BROWN

Rock inuenced island reggae performs with “Hawaii’s #1 female artistâ€? - Mele.com

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âœŚ

May 10 -16, 2012

ELAN 5.18 HE’S MY BROTHER, SHE’S MY SISTER 6.4 MOBY ACOUSTIC BAND & MOBY (dj set) 6.29 CASH’D OUT 7.5 BEACH HOUSE 7.6 CHRIS ROBINSON BROTHERHOOD 7.12 JOSHUA RADIN UNDERWATER TOUR 2012 7.18 DASHBOARD CONFESSIONAL (SOLO ACOUSTIC) 7.28 BUDDY GUY 9.2


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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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30 ANNIVERSARY

2011

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ars: Semin Wine an half the fun more th eet: & Swn with Salty tio

ersa a conv licchio and Tom Co Simmons Gail

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Events

This year, we celebrate the 30th anniversary of Food & Wine in Aspen with a special, commemorative guide, featuring thoughtful interviews with chefs, features on the unique activities, tasting tips from experts, the complete event schedule, and fun photos from Food & Wine festivals in the past.

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May 10 -16, 2012


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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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WELCOME MAT

INSIDE this EDITION

DEPARTMENTS 08 12 14 17 28 29 34 42

THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION LEGENDS & LEGACIES FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE WINEINK FOOD MATTERS VOYAGES LOCAL CALENDAR CROSSWORD

WINEINK CHARDONNAYS YOU SHOULD NOT IGNORE 17 || A&E A WHORE, SOME HEAT AND THE NBA PLAYOFFS 20

MAY 10-16, 2012 • ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

GEAR | PAGE 14

CULTURE/CHARACTERS/COMMENTARY

20 A&E

24 COVER STORY

As the NBA playoffs start to get interesting, arts editor Stewart Oksenhorn reviews “The Whore of Akron.”

Writer Amanda Charles speaks with three local fire departments about the challenges as the fire season nears.

FIND IT INSIDE

THE DEPARTMENTS ARE DIALING IT IN SEE PAGE 24

ON THE COVER Thinkstock photo

EDITOR’S NOTE

the white house’s worst best moment | In case you

missed it, Vice President Biden told the nation last weekend that he was “absolutely comfortable” with gay marriage. And then, deaf to the applause of most of mainstream America, immediately backed up on the statement and hid behind election-year politics. two toilets — one for It was more than straights and one for sad. It was tragic gays. Its image directly to the thousands of linked to the Civil Americans who do Rights Era and could not not share the right to have been stronger or marry simply because more accurate in how they choose to define it shaped the genesis of love — not a blackthe current debate. and-white subject last RYAN SLABAUGH The president, with time I checked — in a an election in a few months, has different way. The immediacy of stayed on his perpetual hem-andthe administration’s reversal was haw about the subject, saying, “This timed before Tuesday’s vote in is a tough one for me. I’m divided.” North Carolina on a ballot item This is troubling, and not just defining marriage as only between a man and a woman, another one of because he’s the president. To be clear to him and the rest those laws that are thinly disguised of Congress, this is not a religious hate messages to the state’s gay matter — this is a legal one. Yet population. Like the old Jim Crow voters and their representatives laws that kept “free” blacks out of racist institutions, it says, “We can’t continue to confuse the two, citing Bible verses for one justification kick you out, but we can make you and “God’s wrath” for another. If miserable.” we used the Bible as a defense in all A gay-rights group has already civil-rights cases, under the right made the leap between civil circumstance, women certainly rights for minorities and gay would not vote, we’d be killing our rights. About a month ago in first-borns, and most of us would North Carolina, the group began be slaves. running an advertisement showing

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So let’s not. Instead, let’s do what democratic institutions should have and have done — define our rights with legality and freedom in mind and get back to helping improve our quality of living. The last time I checked, no matter what we decide, banning gay marriage will not add jobs to the economy, secure our position on the world stage or make us feel safer. I dare say it does the opposite. Locking gays out of our society adds hypocrisy to our call for civil rights in places like China and Pakistan. It threatens us as it shows our government is willing to create laws when our actions make them feel uncomfortable and nothing more. And finally, it is out of touch with most of the country, especially to a young generation of people who will likely repeal all of these laws in the next 20 years — and vote their conscience this November. rslabaugh@aspentimes.com

VOLUME 1 ✦ ISSUE NUMBER 25

Editor-in-Chief Ryan Slabaugh Advertising Director Gunilla Asher Subscriptions Dottie Wolcott Design Afton Groepper Arts Editor Stewart Oksenhorn Production Manager Evan Gibbard Contributing Editors Mary Eshbaugh Hayes Gunilla Asher Kelly Hayes Jill Beathard Jeanne McGovern John Colson Contributing Writers Paul Andersen Hilary Stunda Amanda Charles Michael Appelbaum Warren Miller Contributing Partners High Country News Aspen Historical Society The Ute Mountaineer Explore Booksellers www.aspentimes.com Sales Ashton Hewitt Jeff Hoffman David Laughren Christian Henrichon Su Lum Louise Walker Classified Advertising (970) 925-9937


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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

VOX POP What is your favorite activity to do around the campfire? JONATHAN HUSSEY U TA H

“Roast s’mores because they are delicious.”

CHAD ABBOTT U TA H

“Just hanging out and talking. It’s very relaxing.”

MOLLY FERSTER P E N N SY LVA N I A

“Have a nice glass of wine. The wine is relaxing and it helps with the whole ambiance of it.”

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May 10 -16, 2012

with JOHN COLSON

ALEC, a corporate shill dressed up as a charity THERE’S A NEW bully at large in the land, and its name is ALEC. That’s short for the American Legislative Exchange Council, a radical-right lobbying group posing as a nonprofit that provides a venue for corporations to write state laws designed to make those corporations richer and more powerful, sneakily undermining the democratic process. Legislators in attendance at ALEC functions carry these propositions back to their state capitols and work to get them made into laws, without ever acknowledging their source. In short, ALEC offers corporations a chance to get around the inconvenient framework of our republic and its legislative processes. Sounds pretty cozy, eh? Not only do corporations buy the elections for their pet legislators, they hand-feed them the bills that, if they become law, give the corporations even more power to continue corrupting the nation’s body politic. What’s more, according to Common Cause and other watchdog groups, this smart-ALEC is fed by corporate slush funds and people like the Koch brothers, David and Charles. An estimated 98 percent of its finances come from corporations, corporate trade groups and corporate foundations, according to the Center for Media and Democracy, a wikibased investigative journalism group. Oh, right, the state legislators who are members of this piratical outfit each pay a 50 yearly fee, the CMD reports. Those fees make up the remaining two percent of ALEC’s annual allowance. According to numerous published reports, ALEC has his fingers deep in the legislative pie in every single state in the U.S., pushing bills and resolutions that neither you nor I would ever want to see become law. “These bills and resolutions reach into almost every area of American life: worker and consumer rights, education, the rights of Americans injured or killed by corporations, taxes, health care, immigration, and the quality of the air we breathe and the water we drink,” states the CMD on its website. “Only by seeing the depth and breadth and language of the bills can one fully understand the power and sweep of corporate

influence behind the scenes on bills affecting the rights and future of every American in every single state.” With an eye toward showing citizens just who and what ALEC is, the CMD has mounted a campaign called “ALEC Exposed” that details the workings of this bunch. Check it out if you don’t want to believe me. With some 1,000 bills and resolutions either now on the law books or in the works to become laws, it’s impossible for me to list all the areas of interest behind ALEC’s machinations. But that list would include the privatization of Medicare, Medicaid and other government health-care programs for seniors, the poor and the underinsured. If you’re not wealthy and you think its hard getting decent health care now, well, you ain’t seen nothin’ yet. The list also would include an effort to do away with teachers’ unions, privatize the nation’s schools, and completely reverse more than 200 years’ worth of guarantees that everyone in the U.S. have access to a good education. What once was a model school system, a beacon for the rest of the world, is in shambles thanks to this kind of thinking In essence, ALEC is the tool of those who want to enshrine the elitist trends that have infected this country for the last half-century. Those of us who are not wealthy do not deserve a decent home, a decent job, a decent education and a decent life, in ALEC’s view. What we do deserve, ALEC would be quick to explain if he were an honest human being, is to slave away all our lives for low wages, and die as soon as can be arranged once we lose our productive abilities. That is the new American dream, friends and neighbors — a nightmare of social Darwinism cobbled together by the corporations that owe their very existence to us, the workers and the doers. All ALEC has to do is keep us on our knees, our eyes glued to fancy toys and virtual reality, our brains and bodies dulled and dumbed down, and it’s clear sailing for him and the 1-percenters who created him.

HIT&RUN

jcolson@aspentimes.com

V O X P O P C O M P I L E D B Y M I C H A E L A P P E L G AT E


A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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SEEN, HEARD & DONE

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

CHEERS&JEERS

THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

The rain on May 7 turned everything green in a hurry. Here’s to hoping it stays this way.

CHEERS | To the rain we got earlier before this published. This time, we were actually hoping for the journalist’s curse — write about fire danger, and it will rain. Oh, well. The needed moisture will put a small dent in the water deficit we are entering the summer with, and simply put, we’ll take everything we can get at this point. JEERS | To the continued threat of mining pollution from an industry more than a century from its peak. A mine that could contaminate Castle Creek is currently being tested by agencies to get more information, but it should serve a word of caution to current natural-resource negotiators — the effects of shoddy cleanups will go on for decades, so do not let a statute of limitations attached to drilling leases get set for anything less. CHEERS | To Arbor Day on May 12, a simple reminder

that we all have a role to protect the trees in our community. This year, the city of Aspen was recognized by the nonprofit Arbor Day Foundation as a Tree City USA community for the 20th time. In order to earn this recognition, the city has to meet four standards, which include having a tree department, a tree-care ordinance, a comprehensive community forestry program and an Arbor Day observance proclamation. Yeah, us.

JEERS | To the motorists using the West End neighborhoods to escape traffic on Main Street and the highway. This should not be so difficult, as it goes back to the golden rule. Not only is this an annoyance to homeowners it impedes bike and pedestrian traffic. Plus, with additional development planned in the neighborhood, local traffic is going to increase without any additional help from through traffic.

BUZZ WORTHY ASPEN

HIGHWAY WILL CLOSE FOR RIDE FOR THE PASS The Ride for the Pass will be held as scheduled May 19 despite the early opening of Independence Pass to vehicles on May 11. The Colorado Department of Transportation has pledged to close the pass on the day of the event to accommodate the ride, according to Mark Fuller, executive director of the Independence Pass Foundation, the organization hosting the event. Highway 82 over the pass will be closed from 6 a.m. to approximately 1:30 p.m. on May 19, Fuller said. This will be the 18th annual ride, though it was canceled last year because of poor weather and snow on the road. The early registration fee is 40 per individual and 70 for families. It includes a party after the ride where numerous prizes are given away.

Registration can be done online at www.active.com/cycling/aspen-co/ridefor-the-pass-2012 or at the Limelight Lodge in Aspen and Community Bank in Basalt starting May 17. ASPEN

RANGERS DEBATE TRAIL MESSAGE Now that cow carcasses have been cleared from the area, the U.S. Forest Service is trying to determine what exactly to tell hikers heading to the popular Conundrum Hot Springs. The Aspen-Sopris Ranger District posted a sign at the Conundrum Creek trailhead the morning of May 3 warning backpackers that the cow carcasses might have contaminated water sources in the valley and that the carcasses could attract bears and other predators. The Gunnison Ranger District preferred a different message, so by the afternoon of May 3 the sign was replaced by one more

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

May 10 -16, 2012

TOP 5 THINGS WE SAW LAST WEEKEND

O1

A seven-piece mariachi band

O2

Shorts, T-shirts

O3

Alpacas

O4

People cheering at horses

O5

Nobody on Difficult Trail

POST US YOUR TOP FIVE THINGS jbeathard@aspentimes.com

STAY IN THE KNOW — CATCH UP ON RECENT NEWS & LOCAL EVENTS benign. The new sign doesn’t mention the cow carcasses or the possibility of water contamination. Instead it urges backpackers to follow bearproof food storage practices. The sign includes a diagram showing how to safely prepare and store food to avoid conflicts with bears. Scott Condon

GARFIELD COUNTY

TOWNS DISAGREE WITH COMMISSIONERS ON DRILLING Three towns in Garfield County have recently urged the U.S. Bureau of Land Management to take the most restrictive and conservative approach regarding leasing of public lands for development of oil shale and tar sands. This is in contrast to the position of the Garfield

“I DO NOT WANT TO SACRIFICE ANY OF MY TOES FOR EVEREST.” 10

FIVE THINGS

Board of County Commissioners. In comments sent April 9, the commissioners blasted the BLM for paying too much attention to what the commissioners called “anti-oil-shale and pro-wilderness groups” in the agency’s deliberations about the future of oil shale. The elected boards of Rifle, New Castle and Carbondale all recently sent letters commenting on the BLM’s Programmatic Environmental Impact Statement concerning the two energy-resource issues. The federal agency is analyzing proposals to lease public lands in Colorado, Wyoming and Utah for research and development of both energy resources, although the tarsands regions are only in Utah. The Garfield County Commissioners and the governments of 13 counties in the three-state region, in a joint letter to the BLM, have lobbied for the BLM to simply return to the development plan adopted by the Bush administration in 2008. — John Colson SWISS SPEED CLIMBER UELI STECK ON TURNING AROUND ON EVEREST SUMMIT DAY

P H OTO B Y RYA N S L A BA U G H


THE WEEKLY CONVERSATION

GUEST OPINION COLUMN

by JEFF WELSCH of WRITERS ON THE RANGE

There are crazy ideas, and then there’s Utah OF ALL THE NUTTY ideas floating around the West of late — that Wyoming needs an aircraft carrier to prepare for the coming apocalypse, that Idaho residents should be allowed to lure wolves by using pets as bait, or that Yellowstone bison in Montana are “bio-terrorists” because they might cause brucellosis — none can match Utah’s on the incredulity meter. JEFF WELSCH Some in the Beehive State are abuzz about the current effort to seize control of all public lands within its borders except for national parks, wilderness areas, military bases and Indian reservations. But unlike the seasonal silliness in Wyoming, Idaho and Montana, this Utah land grab has traction. The state Legislature passed a bill asserting eminent domain over public lands — our lands — and the governor has signed it, pledging a lawsuit if Utah doesn’t receive nearly 30 million acres by 2015. The U.S. Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management are shrugging off Utah’s chest thumping as little more than election-year bluster. They view it as a revival of the failed Sagebrush Rebellion of the 1970s, and are confident that any takeover effort will be laughed out of court. Yet the very idea should give us pause, and ranchers, outfitters, guides and other small-business owners whose livelihoods depend on economical access to our public lands should be on the alert because parallel conversations have taken place in other Western states. Some Arizona state legislators keep pushing to add 25 million acres of federal lands and similar drumbeats echo across New Mexico and Colorado. In Montana, Rep. Denny Rehberg, who apparently feels that 32,000 miles of roads on our Forest Service lands aren’t nearly enough, supports releasing the nation’s few remaining non-wilderness, roadless areas for development. This has flabbergasted a broad range of constituents who view open space as essential to their livelihoods and the Montana way of life. Let’s be clear about motives: These politicians want our lands

THINKSTOCK PHOTO

so their financial backers can mine, drill, pave and otherwise develop without having to deal with such pesky matters as clean air, clean water and other health safeguards. Special interests in Utah want to drill for oil and gas right next to national parks, and their counterparts in Arizona are itching for a uranium mine on the fringes of Grand Canyon National Park. Not stopping at his own state’s

Lest we forget, public lands provide us with clean water, clean air and essential wildlife habitat. These are the places where millions of Americans go to hunt, fish, hike, camp, ride, run, ski, pedal, photograph, explore or simply find solitude in a rapidly shrinking and increasingly noisy world. These lands provide hundreds of thousands of jobs and billions of dollars that benefit the economies of small rural

Europeanizing this nation, wait until you have to pay a premium to hunt or fish on lands your grandparents once freely traversed. Do the simple math: More people plus less public land equals less access and more crowds on the few equalopportunity landscapes we have left. All of which leads to more rules, regulations and expense for the average American. Most of us recognize the

communities. Above all, public lands are the embodiment of American freedom and individualism — places where anyone can go regardless of race, creed, color or stock portfolio. Our 750 million acres of public lands, much of it established more than a century ago by forefathers with wisdom and vision, sets our nation apart. If anyone thinks wilderness locks up land, wait until all of us in the West get met by miles of fences, gates, padlocks, corporate signage and corner posts spray painted in bright orange. If you think government programs are

economic, ecological and spiritual value of our public lands. A whopping 93 percent of Colorado voters recently polled sees them as essential to the state’s overall health. Sell our public lands? Seriously? For anyone who thinks that nutty idea will sit well on Main Street America, I’ve got an aircraft carrier on Yellowstone Lake to sell you.

A common sign in Utah.

borders, Florida Rep. Cliff Stearns has floated the idea of selling some of our national parks to private interests. Just think of the possibilities: Utah’s Arches National Park could be renamed Golden Arches National Park and leveled for a McDonald’s theme park. In California, John Muir’s favorite spot on the planet could be sold to Warner Bros. and renamed Yosemite Sam National Park. When in North Carolina, we could view the R.J. Reynolds Great Smoking Mountain National Park from the comfort of our cars on a new highway dubbed Tobacco Road.

Jeff Welsch is a contributor to Writers on the Range, a service of High Country News (hcn.org). He is communications director for the Greater Yellowstone Coalition in Bozeman, Montana.

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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LEGENDS & LEGACIES

CLASSIC ASPEN

by TIM WILLOUGHBY

Roads like this section of Independence Pass were fine for horses and buggies but were tough on early automobiles.

THE ROAD FROM BUGGIES TO JALOPIES the transition from buggies to jalopies preceded the change from

wagon roads to highways. Early automobiles were designed to handle the rough roads, but if you wanted to travel from Colorado to California it was much easier to take the train.

The present Highway 82 route was constructed along the former train right of way, with straight stretches and a consistent grade; however, the 1920s road to Glenwood wandered along the Roaring Fork. Roads were maintained, but without constant grading a car navigated through highs and lows, deep holes and ridges of rock. A slow-moving horse and wagon found the roads sufficient; a faster automobile suffered jumps, jolts and flat tires. During Aspen’s winter, car owners put their vehicles on blocks as streets and highways were not plowed. In 1928, my father left Aspen in a 1923 Buick for a two-year adventure around the West. Crossing the Bonneville Salt Flats meant following a few ruts; he aimed his car west, tied the steering wheel and let his car journey on its own. Until he approached Los Angeles, he would never see pavement. Near the end of his travels, he and three acquaintances left the copper mines in Arizona and headed

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toward Salt Lake City. A gas-station attendant suggested a road from Phoenix to Las Vegas to avoid snow. With a 25-gallon gas tank, extra tires and spare parts, they headed off with the 27.5-horsepower engine pushing them. The road (dirt path is a better

They moved on, but the road grew still fainter. Entering a wash, they spotted tracks, but rocks blocked their way. They rolled them aside and proceeded only to find similar boulders. Certain they were headed in the right direction, they labored through the night moving rocks

CROSSING THE BONNEVILLE SALT FLATS MEANT FOLLOWING A FEW RUTS; HE AIMED HIS CAR WEST, TIED THE STEERING WHEEL AND LET HIS CAR JOURNEY ON ITS OWN. UNTIL HE APPROACHED LOS ANGELES, HE WOULD NEVER SEE PAVEMENT. description) led through more and more desolate territory. They thought they had lost the road when they came to a house. The resident told them the last person to drive through had passed six weeks before but that they should have no trouble if they carried a shovel and a crowbar.

May 10 -16, 2012

every few hundred yards. One rock was too large for them to move, so they shoveled dirt to build a ramp up and over it. At daybreak they looked out on a flat plain with no tracks to follow. After crossing the flat, they found an abandoned car that had been stripped. In that moment of

providence, Father decided to pilfer the springs. They had numerous flat tires, as happened regularly in those days even on good roads, and then while they maneuvered through a dry creek bed, they broke a spring. At long last they found tracks that led them to the Colorado River, where they waited for the ferry owner to arrive. There were few bridges in those days. Whenever they forded streams, drivers had to hope water wouldn’t flood the engine and stall it. The ferry engine stalled halfway across the Colorado, and my father and his friends drifted downstream until the operator managed to start it again. Days later they approached Cedar City, Utah, in a snowstorm. They stopped to put on chains and to install the side curtains (the canvastopped car resembled a moving tent with neither windows nor sides). They put the car into its lowest gear and then bashed through miles of snowdrifts. When they got stuck and the engine died, Father hiked into the next town, where he found a man with horses to tow them out of the snowbank. The short tow restarted the motor, and they headed on to Salt Lake City. Father decided roaming the West was not as appealing as staying home in Aspen; he put the Buick to work powering a crosscut saw at the Midnight Mine. It would take decades of improvements to turn horse-paths into highways. Tim Willoughby’s family story parallels Aspen’s. He began sharing folklore while teaching for Aspen Country Day School and Colorado Mountain College. Now a tourist in his native town, he views it with historical perspective. Reach him at redmtn@schat.net.

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE WILLOUGHBY COLLECTION AND THINKSTOCK


LEGENDS & LEGACIES

FROM the VAULT

compiled by THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

FIRE UP MAROON CREEK

1915 S TA R T E D B Y C A M P E R S

PHOTO COURTESY OF THE ASPEN HISTORICAL SOCIETY

“FOREST FIRE UP MAROON” read a headline in the Aspen Democrat-Times on Wednesday, Aug. 4, 1915. “At two o’clock yesterday afternoon ranger Hutchins discovered a small fire in the forest near the Maroon Creek forks about a mile this side of Si Johnson’s ranch and immediately sent word to town for help. Several wagon loads of men were sent up to fight the conflagration. The blaze didn’t amount to much — only two or three acres of straggling trees, grass and fallen timber were burned. The fire fighters returned to town last night about 11:30 o’clock. The blaze was probably started from campers or log[g]ers not extinguishing their fires.”

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GEAR of the WEEK

edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

NEED TO KNOW

249  269 

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MARMOT ANGEL FIRE W’S 25F SLEEPING BAG It’s just about that time — sleeping bag season. And while we know those good sleeping bags are hard to replace, when we do, we realize all over again that new-bag feel. You know, the one when you’re not waking up at night because the duct tape is poking you through the holes you thought you had patched. Anyway, if the duct-tape experience is also your own, here is one possible solution for the ladies — Marmot’s Angel Fire 25F, filled with 600+ goose down. All those feathers should allow it to work for most of the last spring and summer, even going into the fall, ensuring you get three full seasons of use and sleep a little better under the stars. — Ute Mountaineer Staff

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May 10 -16, 2012

PHOTO COURTESY MARMOT


CHAFFIN LIGHT

& Morris & Fyrwald

Price Reduced

Dramatic Riverfront Property s /VER ONE QUARTER MILE VIEWS UP THE 2OARING &ORK 2IVER s &LOOR TO CEILING WINDOWS LOOKING OVER THE TH HOLE AND THE ICONIC WESTERN LANDSCAPE WITH PINK SANDSTONE MESAS s #ONTEMPORARY HOME s BEDROOMS OFlCE FAMILY ROOM FULL HALF BATHS SQ FT s MILES FROM THE 2OARING &ORK #LUB AND CONVENIENT TO !SPEN AND 3NOWMASS 4ED "ORCHELT \ 'ARRETT 2EUSS \ *ANA $ILLARD \

New Listing

Certainly One of Basalt’s Best!

Price Reduced

Private Setting in Blue Creek

BEDROOMS FULL HALF BATHS SQ FT 3PECTACULAR MOUNTAIN VIEWS -ETICULOUSLY CARED FOR HOME ,ARGE PATIO PERFECT FOR EVENING DINING "ECKY !NSLYN \

*UST STEPS FROM THE 2OARING &ORK 2IVER BEDROOMS FULL HALF BATH SQ FT #USTOM HOME AT AN INCREDIBLE VALUE +AREN "AXTER \ 3TEPHANIE 7ILLIAMS \

New Listing

Rarely Lived-In Exquisite Townhome BEDROOMS FULL BATHS SQ FT 2EMODELED WITH HIGH END lNISHES "RIGHT CORNER UNIT EXTRA WINDOWS %ASY WALK TO DOWNTOWN "ASALT -ARGI #RAWFORD \

Riverside Drive in Basalt! BEDROOMS FULL HALF BATHS SQ FT %ASY WALK TO TOWN AND SCHOOLS !PPEALING mOOR PLAN lNISHED BASEMENT 4ED "ORCHELT \ *ANA $ILLARD \

New Listing

Outstanding View Lot MINUTES ABOVE %L *EBEL 5NOBSTRUCTED VIEW FROM 3UNLIGHT TO !SPEN 0AVED ACCESS UNDERGROUND UTILITIES ACRES FOR YOUR DREAM HOME #ARTER "UDWELL \

Pleasant Valley Homesites 3TUNNING PANORAMIC VIEWS FROM )NDEPENDENCE 0ASS TO 3KI 3UNLIGHT &OUR PARCELS AVAILABLE SEPARATELY OR IN COMBINATION 0RICES STARTING AT ACRES %RIC 3TRICKLAND \

Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080 Carbondale | 970.963.4536

ASPENSNOWMASSSIR.COM A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

GUNNER’S LIBATIONS

by GUNILLA ASHER

NEED TO KNOW 2 oz. Van Gogh double espresso vodka 1 oz. Kahlua 1 oz. Baileys 1 oz. cream Poured over ice, shaken and served up in a Martini glass

EYE OPENER HAVE YOU EVER WANTED to drink your dessert rather than eat it? Mezzaluna has a cocktail called the “Eye Opener” that has Van Gogh double espresso vodka, kahlua, baileys and cream. Van Gogh actually soaks the expresso beans in the vodka, which releases the caffeine into the vodka. It tastes like a mocha with a kick and ends up being a summer cocktail that goes down quickly. Gunilla Asher grew up in Aspen, and now is the co-manager of The Aspen Times. She writes a drink review weekly, in the spirit of “She’s not a connoisseur, but she is h eavily practiced.”

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May 10 -16, 2012

CONTRIBUTED PHOTOS


WINEINK

WORDS to DRINK BY

by KELLY J. HAYES

SOME CHARDONNAY TO LOVE LAST WEEK we talked about a grape some people love to hate, but is in fact the most widely consumed of all grapes in America — Chardonnay. The amazing thing about Chardonnay is that it can be so varied and unique depending upon where it is grown and how it is touched by the winemaker’s hand. Here are four examples of very different wines that share some things in common: all are made from Chardonnay grapes, all are affordable and all are All American. Let’s start with KELLY J. bubbles. In the HAYES Champagne region of France, the majority of the world’s most celebratory wines are a blend of Pinot Noir, Pinot Meunier and Chardonnay. But there is a special, light, delicate variety of Champagne called Blanc de Blancs, literally “white of whites,” that is made only from Chardonnay. While some of the prestigious Champagne houses disdain making Blanc de Blancs because they perceive the art of blending the red and white grapes an essential component of Champagne, others revel in it. For those who love the style, nothing is quite like the elegance and the frothy feel in the mouth of a superb Blanc de Blancs. While Blanc de Blanc from Champagne can be difficult to find and expensive, you can try one from the New Mexico based sparkling wine house, Gruet. Though they cannot use the specific title of Champagne (it is legally reserved for wines from the Champagne region), the Gruet 2007 Blanc de Blancs is made using the traditional French méthode champenoise and is a great value at around 25. When people are critical of Chardonnay it is often a response to “flabby” wines. These are wines that are overly oaked, have high alcohol and are out of balance. And they have a point. Many Chardonnays, particularly those that have been mass-produced in lower price ranges,

PHOTO BY THINKSTOCK

have traded balance for yucky, over-drawn flavor. Oak, alcohol and an overly buttery style all mask the quality of the grapes. In the late ‘90s and early ‘oughts, some wines from California and Australia were made in this way to profit from the Chardonnay craze. In fact they were responsible for creating the “Anything but Chardonnay” backlash that followed. But there are also Chardonnays from both regions that are balanced,

bold and delicious, as well as being slightly buttery. This is often the result of making wine using a process called “Malolactic Fermentation,” combined with generous time spent in high quality oak barrels. Malolactic fermentation or, MLF, is sometimes called secondary fermentation. MLF is a practice winemakers use to change the tart and harsh “malic” acids naturally found in grapes to a mellower, more

rounded “lactic” acid. This can An alternative are un-oaked transform the way a Chardonnay Chardonnays that are gaining a tastes and, more importantly, how it following. A great example is made feels in the mouth. The great white by Charlie Wagner II who is the Burgundies are made using this winemaking grandson of one of method and some California wines the founders of Caymus Vineyards, also use this “Burgundian” style in long recognized for the production making wines. of great Napa I recently had Cabernet. Charlie a La Crema 2009 the younger Sonoma Coast makes the Chardonnay that 2010 Mer Soleil Gruet 2007 Blanc de Blancs sells for around “Silver” Unoaked Chardonnay. La Crema 2009 Sonoma Coast Sold in a ceramic Chardonnay bottle, this 2010 Mer Soleil “Silver” wine is aged in Unoaked Chardonnay cement tanks 2007 Kendall Jackson GRAND and undergoes RESERVE Late Harvest no malolactic Chardonnay fermentation whatsoever. It is clean, crisp, stony, acidic, just as it came off of the vine. At 24 a bottle it offers a great contrast to other styles of California Chardonnay including the other Chardonnay that Charlie makes for Mer Soleil that is sourced from the same vineyards, but undergoes varying amounts of MLF and spends a year in oak barrels. Finally, for dessert, may I suggest something completely different. Kendall Jackson, which made its name as producer of California Chardonnay, makes small lots of a 2007 Kendall Jackson GRAND RESERVE Late Harvest Chardonnay. This wine is naturally infected with “Noble Rot” or Botrytis, a fungus which removes the water from the grapes leaving 20 and can be found in most wine behind a high concentration of sugar. shops. This wine feels full and round This ‘liquid gold” is fermented in in the mouth. It has a yellow hue that stainless steel tanks and the resulting comes from spending seven months wines are as unique and special as plus in barrel and yet you can still taste any Chardonnay you’ll the citrus fruit flavors in the wine. It ever taste. is a perfect example of the style that has come to be called “California Kelly J. Hayes lives in the soon-toChardonnay” in the best sense of the be-designated appellation of Old phrase — fresh, balanced, big enough Snowmass with his wife, Linda, and to drink on its own, but also great with a black Lab named Vino. He can be a piece of salmon from the grill. reached at malibukj@wineink.com.

KELLY’S WINELIST

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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FROM ASPEN, WITH LOVE

FOOD MATTERS

A LESSON IN MEXICO’S COASTAL CUISINE CHAYOTE THERE IS A STARK contrast from the interior cities of Mexico City and Guadalajara to that of Mexico’s spectacular coasts. When people think about traveling to Mexico, more often than not, they think about the warm, white sand beaches of the Pacific, Gulf and Caribbean shorelines. Yes, the beaches here are spectacular, and AMIEE WHITE so is its coastal Latin BEAZLEY cuisine. With about 7,000 miles of oceanfront, Mexico is tied dearly to the food from its seas, abundant with fresh fish, octopus, spiny lobster and shrimp. At the Four Seasons Punta Mita, where its food and culinary programs are a large draw, its restaurant, Bahai, run by chef Richard Sandoval, with whom I was traveling, uses the surrounding ocean as its source of inspiration. Bahia — the Spanish word for “bay” — offers dozens of oceaninspired dishes on its menu such as small plates amberjack tiradito (grilled fish with apple, mint, radish and chile de arbol), fresh Baja California oysters and crispy fried calamari in a lime pepper aiolo with pickled jalapeños.

Every day, sometimes multiple times a day, fishermen from nearby villages bring their catch from Banderas Bay to the restaurant. They pull up to Las Cuevas Beach and carry the fish to the shore. It’s an event in itself. Adults and kids gather around as the chef explains what has been caught that day, pointing out razor-sharp barbs on some and the shade, build and flavor profiles of others. Three times a week, guests at Four Seasons Punta Mita have the option of participating in the “Catch of the Day” program, actually picking the fish they want to eat that night for dinner; the chef prepares it as requested. Every Thursday, guests can participate in a cooking class with the chef as they learn how to prepare the catch of the day. The first half of the four-hour class is devoted to instruction, while second half is spent tasting. This program is why

I was there. It was a perfect day at Punta Mita when Sandoval offered a cooking class to prepare a meal of wood-grilled avocado, grilled local octopus and the most delicious “zarandeado”-style whole pink snapper tacos. The ingredients were fresh, techniques were pretty simple, and the reward was great. They used the flavors of Mexico, with chilies and native fruits and vegetables. It allowed us to create dishes where the ingredients shined. Amiee White Beazley writes about dining, restaurants and food-related travel for the Aspen Times Weekly. She is the editor of local food magazine edibleASPEN and contributor to Aspen Peak and the travel website EverettPotter.com. Follow her on Twitter @awbeazley1, or email awb@ awbeazley.com.

Bahia restaurant at Four Seasons Punta Mita gives dining al fresco new meaning with sea breezes and sounds of the ocean.

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CONTRIBUTED PHOTO


by AMIEE WHITE BEAZLEY

“ZARANDEADO” STYLE WHOLE PINK SNAPPER Courtesy Bahia restaurant, Four Seasons Punta Mita

INGREDIENTS: Serves 4 or more. 1

Whole red snapper, cleaned, boneless, butterflied

¾ cup

Olive oil

1

Avocado

12

Flour tortillas

4

Limes

Salt and pepper to taste CHAYOTE SLAW 1

Chayote (green squashlike vegetable)

¼ cup

White cabbage

1

Carrot

1

Lemon

1 cup

Mayonnaise (reserve some to lightly coat fish before grilling)

Salt and pepper to taste ZARANDEADO MARINADE ½ cup

Ancho chili

½ cup

Guajillo chili

½ cup

Pasilla chili

1 cup

Achiote paste

4

Garlic cloves

5 tbsp

White onion

4 cups

Orange juice

4 cups

Basic tomato sauce

Salt and pepper to taste PREPARATION: ZARANDEADO MARINADE For the zarandeado marinade, remove the seeds and stems from the dry chilies. In a dry pan, toast each of them until fragrant and place them in a blender. Blend on high with orange juice and achiote paste. Sauté the garlic and onion with a bit of oil until well caramelized. Add the chili paste and tomato sauce, and cook for an hour to reduce. When cooked, blend the sauce, strain it well, chill, and reserve in the refrigerator.

CHAYOTE SLAW Clean, peel and wash the chayote, carrot and cabbage. Cut all into thin slices, add salt and lime juice, and let it drain for 1 hour. Remove the extra juice; add a bit of mayonnaise, seasoned to taste with salt and pepper.

FISH For the fish, clean it well, cut the fins remove the bones, and butterfly. Season the red snapper with salt, ground black pepper and olive oil. With a brush, cover the fish with the zarandeado sauce and a small amount of mayonnaise. Place fish on a grill basket. Cook the fish on the grill. Serve the fish in tortillas with avocado, lime wedges and the chayote slaw. Near the Four Seasons Punta Mita is Sandzibar, a fantastic coastal restaurant next to the Alamar Beach Club. CONTRIBUTED PHOTO

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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ARTS&ENTERTAINMENT

MUSIC/ART/FILM/LITERATURE

WHEN A WHORE TAKES THE FLOOR, A SAGE TAKES THE PAGE AS THE NBA PLAYOFFS NEAR FULL SPEED, AUTHOR SCOTT RAAB HELPS US REMEMBER THE EGOS BEHIND THE JERSEYS THIS YEAR’S NBA playoffs lack an easy villain. (Perhaps the best candidate for a legitimate universal foe are the schedule-makers, who have determined that these playoffs could end as late as June 28 — nearly half the way into baseball season, for Shammgodsake! Wasn’t this supposed to be the lockout-shortened season?) It was so much easier this time last year, when the nation, having dispatched Osama Bin-Laden in early May, turned its attention to true Public Enemy No. 1: LeBron James.

NOTEWORTHY: WHORE OF AKRON: ONE MAN’S SEARCH FOR THE SOUL OF LEBRON JAMES SCOTT RAAB HARPER, 302 PAGES, $25.99

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On July 8, 2010, James — who should have acted as contrite as possible, who should have done this as quietly as the world would have allowed — instead went live on ESPN, in a spectacle that had been hyped as high as the late Manute Bol’s armpits, and told the world, in a cringe-inducing, bottom-licking interview, that he was going to leave the Cleveland Cavaliers and the cold and gloom and of his home-state of Ohio to take an offer from the Miami Heat, and the Southern Florida sun and warmth and glamour that went with it. Even those who don’t ordinarily take a rooting interest in this endless marathon known as the basketball postseason gleefully took sides against James as the 2011 playoffs began. The Heat, despite being odds-on favorites, flamed out, losing in the finals to the Dallas Mavericks. James folded up in the series, with a particularly vivid disappearing act reserved for the fourth quarter — crunch time. After the collapse, he seems to have lost his power as a magnet for collective booing. As this current postseason plods through its early stages, hatred toward the Heat is in short supply. The reigning emotion is sympathy — for the Chicago Bulls, who tied for the best record in the regular season then lost their best player, Derrick Rose, to injury; for the San Antonio Spurs and Boston Celtics, aging teams playing excellent ball; even, improbably, for the New York Knicks, who are trying to overcome injuries, a

recent history of epic ineptitude, the shortcomings of star scorer Carmelo Anthony, and, yes, a first-round match-up with the Heat. But in his Glen Ridge, N.J. living room, Scott Raab is surely, singlehandedly, making up for any lack of venom directed toward LeBron James and the Miami Heat. If God had intentionally set out to create a LeBron hater, he couldn’t have made one more suited to the job than Raab. “The Whore of Akron,” the first book by Raab, published in November, is a venting of cosmic proportions. Early in the book, Raab declares himself not just your typical rabid Cavaliers fan who saw James as the apparent savior of a historically crummy franchise. A 59-year-old Cleveland native and a writer-atlarge for Esquire magazine, Raab anoints himself witness for an entire city that has suffered. Raab knows how to suffer. His father left when Raab was a kid; his mother, a world-class martyr, moved the family back to Cleveland to move in with Raab’s grandparents. The family is working-class Jewish; there’s a long history of depression and desertion. Raab’s childhood is one of overeating, anxiety, drug abuse and petty crime. And sports. Not playing them; Raab is too fat to even consider it. But following sports — including the 1964 NFL title game won by the Browns, the last championship taken by a Cleveland time, a game attended by Raab — is his best outlet for emotion and hope. Not that following Cleveland’s teams is a particularly fruitful pursuit; the city has been deprived of a championship, enduring far more than its share of improbable shots and miraculous comebacks. The drought, along with a divorce, poverty and self-loathing, has instilled in Raab an intense yearning

PHOTO BY ROPER


by STEWART OKSENHORN

G DO WEEK

Noah

THE

Noah is a young adorable “young” 8 year old pug mix. He is an outgoing guy who loves attention and to give kisses. His tail wags a mile a minute and is an all around happy boy. He gets along great with other dogs and cats and loves kids. He has the cutest underbite, loves belly rubs, and to cuddle and be held like a baby. He is housetrained and uses a dog door. He is neutered, up to date with all his shots and micro chipped. Great little dog! If you are interested in him please fill out an application on www.luckydayrescue.org then call 970-379-4606. LUCKY DAY ANIMAL RESCUE OF COLORADO

www.luckydayrescue.org

J I M PA U S S A P O R T R A I T P H O T O G R A P H Y

ASPEN 970.948.5886

for sports glory. And when the Cavaliers, in 2003, won the first pick in the draft, and selected the can’tmiss prospect LeBron “King” James, there was cause for hope. Few were as hopeful as Raab who, while moving from Cleveland, remained a diehard fan of its teams. Few were as damaged and angered when James told a live TV audience, “I’m going to take my talents to South Beach.” If “The Whore of Akron” were just an in-depth, pull-no-punches account of a complicated, ultimately fragile superstar athlete, it would have been enough. Such books are rare; athletes are generally given enormous deference and portrayed as one-, maybe two-dimensional characters. But Raab, who has had some personal contact with James, goes so far as to give credence to the unseemly story behind James’ poor performance in the 2010 playoffs, when he was still with the Cavaliers — that James’ teammate, Delonte West, had an affair with James’ mother. Raab digs deep enough in his research process that he gets himself banned by the Heat.

PHOTOS BY AP

Better than any book I’ve read, “The Whore of Akron” illuminates this bizarre four-way between fan, team, town and player. Why do we associate ourselves so closely with athletes who we don’t know, who don’t necessarily come from the same place we do, who are probably going to leave us? Why do these people and organizations identify a city? And why was Scott Raab overcome with joy when the Miami Heat lost in the finals last year? (”LeBron has lost in the worst possible way and I was here to see it,” Raab writes.) Why is Scott Raab now in front of his TV, rooting, praying for New York — or Boston, or Oklahoma City, somebody — to beat LeBron James into the ground? The answer is, it ain’t all about LeBron. “The Whore of Akron” is equally Raab’s memoir, and he goes as deep into his own dark head and history as he does into James’, touching on fatherhood and Judaism with wit, sharp observations, brave reporting and revelation. Without knowing Raab, we wouldn’t care that much for his profane excoriation of James.

WWW.PAUSSA.COM

JIM@PAUSSA.COM

the

read the latest edition online at WWW.ASPENTIMES.COM/WEEKLY

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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CHAFFIN LIGHT

& Morris & Fyrwald Flying Dog Ranch • • • • •

One of the last original ranches near Aspen Located in pastoral Woody Creek Adjacent to National Forest Land Extreme privacy with excellent views Riding, hiking, fishing, elk hunting and more - right out your back door! • 4 parcels totalling 245 acres • Nearly 1 mile of Collin’s & Woody Creeks • A majestic property that can only be appreciated first hand $40,404,040 Ed Zasacky | 970.379.2811 Lydia McIntyre | 970.309.5256 New Listing

Premier Location in East Owl Creek 5 bedrooms, 5 full, 2 half baths, 7,998 sq ft 7 acre premier lot with great views Conveys essence of pure Colorado Peaceful retreat just 10 minutes to Aspen $9,750,000 Partially Furnished Carol Hood | 970.379.0676

Highlands Ski-In/Ski-Out 5 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 6,919 sq ft Panoramic views throughout Beautiful architecture and details Large outdoor entertaining areas $12,900,000 $8,450,000 Rochelle Bouchard | 970.379.1662

Two Creeks Home 6 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 6,050 sq ft Exclusive ski-in/ski-out in Two Creeks Expansive decks perfect for entertaining Mature landscaping, tons of privacy $9,500,000 Furnished Larry Jones | 970.379.8757

Estate Living on Maroon Creek 2.88 acres with extensive creek frontage 6 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 5,660 sq ft Over 1,100 sq ft of deck spaces Less than 5 minutes from Aspen Highlands $8,950,000 $7,995,000 Furnished Mark Haldeman | 970.379.3372

Stunning Starwood Estate 5 bedrooms, 6.5 baths, 7,908 sq ft Spring flowers are popping out Light green leaves now frame the view Framed by vistas of 4 ski mountains $8,495,000 AnneAdare Wood | 970.274.8989

Irreplaceable Legacy Property 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 5,140 sq ft penthouse Top floor in Aspen’s quiet West End Bordered on one side by green space Walk to Music Tent & downtown Aspen $6,295,000 Raifie Bass | 970.948.7424

Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080 Carbondale | 970.963.4536

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Like No Other • • • • • • • • • • • •

Wood Run Ski Home 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, 3,958 sq ft Remodeled with the finest materials Ski access & mountain views Wood burning fireplace, hardwood floors $5,900,000 Partially Furnished Maureen Stapleton | 970.948.9331

Classic Mountain Home 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 5,049 sq ft Designed with a flair for the dramatic Extensive vistas from nearly every room Two enormous master suites, office $4,500,000 Susan Hershey | 970.948.2669

Breathtaking Mountain Views 5 bedrooms, 5 full, 3 half baths 7,940 sq ft elegant new Aspen home Unobstructed Aspen Mountain views Unparalleled value, easy stroll to downtown $12,760,000 $5,500,000 Zack Feast | 970.404.7654

Gorgeous Mountain Valley Home 4 bedrooms, 4.5 baths, 4,116 sq ft All above grade space, main level master Ideal entertaining spaces, all day sun Breathtaking views of Aspen Mountain $6,100,000 $4,350,000 Peter Stelljes | 970.948.1594

Rarely available country estate in West Aspen 1+ acre setting with landscaped grounds Heated pool, waterfall, pond 2 fire pits, gazebo, patio, expansive lawn 6 bedrooms, 7.5 baths, 5,607 sq ft Separate pool house with 1 bedroom Casual & formal entertaining areas Exquisite finishes throughout 3 fireplaces, hardwood floors Designer furnishings, A/C, radiant heat 2 car garage Truly a delight for the senses! $9,950,000 Furnished Susan Hershey | 970.948.2669

Fox Run 4 bedrooms, 4 full, 2 half baths, 4,800 sq ft Contemporary Charles Kennedy design Almost a full acre, only minutes to Aspen $1,975,000 Land Only $4,750,000 Land & Completed Home Larry Jones | 970.379.8757 Lex Tarumianz | 970.618.5648

Meadowood Privacy 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths, 3,147 sq ft Private location surrounded by open space Summer stream and water feature Mountain and Maroon Creek Valley views $4,250,000 $3,975,000 Craig Ward | 970.379.1254

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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Рюд

May 10 -16, 2012

PHOTO FROM THINKSTOCK


TO YOUR STATIONS IN A TIME OF HIGH RISK AND INCREASED CUTBACKS, FIREFIGHTERS IN THE REGION BAND TOGETHER by AMANDA CHARLES drought, unhealthy forests, fire bans, low fuel-moisture content

— the result of a mild winter and high spring temperatures — have forced firefighters throughout the valley to scamper to combine training efforts and resources to tackle a spring season that promises big risk and little mud. With a wildfire season arriving much earlier than years past, special districts in Aspen, Snowmass and Basalt respond to large call volumes as they work to uphold a professional level of service while keeping their staff trained. But with a budget directly affected by decreased property values, giving some districts no choice but to cut buying and tap into savings accounts, fire marshals and chiefs stress the importance of mutual aid and public responsibility.

P H OTO B Y RYA N S L A BA U G H

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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PITKIN COUNTY FIRE BANS IN EFFECT In Pitkin County, Sheriff Joe Disalvo issued a burn ban in early April with support from fire chiefs in Aspen, Snowmass Village, Basalt and Carbondale. It has remained in effect, though officials have permitted some burning of ditches, a springtime ritual to clear the waterways for agricultural purposes. “Any burning of slash piles is illegal,” said Aspen Fire Marshal Ed Van Walraven. As a matter of course, no open burning is allowed in Pitkin County from May 1 to Oct. 31 anyway, the fire marshal noted. That restriction is aimed at the sorts of fires that require a permit. The restrictions enacted early in April, however, also prohibit: •

Any campfire, warming fire or charcoal grill except those in permanent fire pits or fire grates or located in designated campgrounds, picnic areas or developed recreation sites.

Smoking except within an enclosed vehicle or building, at a developed recreation site or while stopped in an area of at least 3 feet in diameter that is barren or cleared of all flammable material.

Operating a chain saw without an approved spark-arresting device and in effective working order, without a chemical pressurized fire extinguisher or without a shovel.

Welding or operation of an acetylene or other torch with open flame except within an area that is barren or cleared of all flammable material at least 10 feet on all sides from the equipment. Use of any fireworks or explosive requiring fuses or blasting caps.

The burn ban applies to all private and state lands in Pitkin County. Federal lands are exempt. — Reporting by Janet Urquhart

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Coordination between departments also includes the U.S. Forest Service, which can help bring air power to large, destructive fires.

Aspen volunteers With a paid staff of five and the rest composed of on-call volunteers, the Aspen Fire Protection District services 87 square miles between four stations and is responsible for all fire emergencies occurring within its boundaries. Like Snowmass, Basalt and Carbondale, the AFPD operates as a special district, meaning it is

But since the incorporation of a paid fire marshal position 17 years ago, Van Walraven recalled, the volunteer department, which deals solely with operations, has toughened its requirements and its preventive work. “Over the past 15 years my department alone was able to update fire codes and life safety systems including alarms, sprinklers and

“OVER THE PAST 15 YEARS MY DEPARTMENT ALONE WAS ABLE TO UPDATE FIRE CODES AND LIFE SAFETY SYSTEMS INCLUDING ALARMS, SPRINKLERS AND ANNUAL INSPECTIONS IN BUILDINGS.” — ASPEN FIRE MARSHAL ED VAN WALRAVEN independently governed by an elected board of resident, citizen directors and obtains funding through property taxes paid by residents living in the service area. Fire Marshal Ed Van Walraven and chief volunteer Willard Clapper have a lead on the history of their district — one of the reasons the department has experienced the longeststanding success out of all volunteer organizations in the state. “Before we spearheaded a campaign and unified as a special district in 1953, the fire department was essentially a couple guys from different towns going out to squirt water on a fire,” Van Walraven said of the department’s lack of formality.

annual inspections in buildings,” he said. “As a result, we have very little structure fires, which demonstrates the expert standards our team holds for their services.” In addition to providing volunteers with a Firefighter I certification, which requires at least 36 hours of training per year, the AFPD trains volunteers on all emergency situations on a regular basis and often combines these drills with other districts, the local forest service and the police departments, both in the classroom and in the field. And while the district maintains an extensive community-outreach program that provides prevention education to parents and kids on a

range of topics — from fire and water rescue to hazardous materials and car accidents — Chief Volunteer Willard Clapper is certain that without a progressive, fiscally responsible board, mutual aid from sister districts and a responsive public, the AFPD wouldn’t have accomplished nearly as much as it has today. “So many people walk through our doors and stand in awe of our equipment, wondering how in the world we manage to sustain all our resources under a volunteer fire department,” Clapper said in regard to its latest million-dollar purchase of a 107-foot aerial ladder truck. “I just refer them to the values of the properties around us. … These are the homes and people we need to protect, and our community recognizes that.”

Snowmass: More with less Travel 10 miles down the road to the Snowmass-Wildcat Fire District, and realize that while it too is a special district, decreased property values in its 46-square-mile service area have resulted in distress on its multipart operation, which employs 25 full-time firefighter paramedic staff and a separate medical division. Fire Marshal John Mele elaborates on operational cutbacks, strategic plans and crossover training for his paid staff — all while fighting to protect lands that haven’t been this dry since 2002.

AP PHOTO


CHAFFIN LIGHT

& Morris & Fyrwald

New Listing Frying Pan River Frontage s ACRE PARCEL WITH A HOME AND CABINS s ,OCATED MILES FROM THE HEART OF "ASALT s /VER HALF A MILE OF &RYING 0AN 2IVER FRONTAGE s "ORDERED ON THREE SIDES BY ",- AND .ATIONAL &OREST %NTIRE ACRE PARCEL $ODGE #ITY 0ARCEL ACRES (OMESTEAD 0ARCEL n ACRES *ANA $ILLARD \ 4ED "ORCHELT \

PriceReduced Reduced Price

New Listing

7.56 Acres on the Roaring Fork River

Sopris Mountain Ranch Views‌

&OR THE ANGLER GARDENER ARTIST NATURE LOVER Several cabins with multiple bedrooms Approval for 5,000 sq ft home 2EDUCED 0ENNEY %VANS #ARRUTH \

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Homesite with Panoramic Views 5.74-acre West Sopris Creek homesite 7ITHIN MINUTES OF "ASALT Rolling wooded landscape $495,000 *ANA $ILLARD \ 4ED "ORCHELT \

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Plan Your Getaway Cabin‌ Gorgeous 37.74-acre parcel Views of Ruedi Reservoir Surrounded by towering pines $250,000 +IM #OATES \ ,ESLIE .EWBURY \

Serene Setting‌ Spectacular Views! &OX -EADOWS IN -ISSOURI (EIGHTS 5NOBSTRUCTED ACRE LOT GENTLE TOPOGRAPHY "UILD YOUR DREAM HOME OF UP TO SQ FT "ORDERS ACRES OF COMMUNITY OPEN SPACE $250,000 $OUG ,EIBINGER \

Desirable Aspen Junction Homesite .88 acres with generous building options Heavily wooded piĂąions Unrestricted views of Emma and Sopris Rarely available! $225,000 Karen Toth | 970.379.5252

Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080 Carbondale | 970.963.4536

ASPENSNOWMASSSIR.COM A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

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Basalt Fire Department firefighters train in 2011 in public to show the hazards of distracted driving and to brush up on their first-responder skills.

Private contractors, including helicopter companies, can also be called in to help local fire departments control quickly spreading fires.

“Our yearly call volume is around 1,000 with 40 percent of them in response to medical emergencies,” Mele said of his operation. “Our staff and volunteers are required to be trained as firefighters, paramedics and EMTs, and many of our personnel are cross-trained in most disciplines.” With 13 pieces of apparatus, including three Advanced Life Support-equipped ambulances, the SWFD operates under one station with capabilities spreading to hazardousmaterials response, automobile extrication, high- and low-angle rescue, ice rescue, aircraft incidents and fire suppression. Each apparatus and piece of emergency equipment is checked by the team for readiness on a daily basis, and varied trainings delegated by a shift captain are performed regularly, including the agencies’ latest “refresher” training in wild land this month. To cut the cost of travel and food, Mele tries to keep most training inhouse with the exception of specialized trainings and valleywide, combined fire department trainings via mutual, automatic-aid agreements. “The collaboration of fire departments across the valley started

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The Snowmass-Wildcat Fire Department responds to a fire.

as handshake mutual-aid agreement as we realized we were all facing the same types of hazards in each of our jurisdictions,” he said. “Manpower would be our primary lack of resource should a large event occur. … We must join emergency forces locally to combat a tragedy like a large wildfire or structural building collapse.” But despite unifying efforts to serve individual communities with increased manpower and quicker response times, including a “matching” of equipment to make a seamless exchange in emergency situations, Mele noted how his department continues to make conscious cutbacks on utilities such as lights and gasoline usage. “Our district is not unique to this downturn of economy,” he said. “Our station is over 40 years old and in need of a replacement. We hold a great responsibility to protect our citizens from tragedy, but largely it is the community as a whole that decides the level of emergency response it wants and needs.” So far, Mele’s team has serviced

fires at North Fork, Castle Creek and Warren Creek Lane as it prepares for a wildfire season that usually doesn’t surface until August. He advises residents to store a 72-hour emergency kit in a safe place and practice escape drills should a hazardous event occur.

Basalt: 13 people, 492 square miles Fire Chief Scott Thompson and his crew currently operate a 34-yearold apparatus to help them service a district that spans 492 square miles and exists as one of the largest fire departments in Colorado. With a full-time staff of only 13 and fewer than 50 volunteers, the Basalt Fire Protection District is composed of nearly 80 members among four fire stations and provides emergency fire, medical and preventive services between both Pitkin and Eagle counties. Responding to approximately 600 calls per year — 65 percent EMSrelated — Thompson and his team have recently been on their toes with

approximately 20 calls per week and a budget that has been cut almost 1 million from last year. “We anticipated this shift in the housing market about five years ago as we stopped buying new trucks and started putting money away into saving accounts,” Thompson said. This year alone, Thompson’s district was forced to extract 150,000 from its savings to supplement the budget; 30,000 went to the replacement of the roof in the main station, and the rest went to aid services and operations. But according to Thompson, the saving accounts won’t support them forever, and if property values don’t make an upturn in the near future, the BFPD could be forced to shutdown a station and layoff valuable personnel. “It makes sense to have a separate tax go to our service alone,” he said. “In some cases it’s more advantageous than competing with other city entities for the upkeep of services. But I would hate to see us have to shut down a station because of decreased property values.” Due to the span of BFPD’s service radius, separate fire stations help increase manpower and response times as they lower insurance rates and gas mileage. In the meantime, however, Thompson and his team remain optimistic as they respond to high call volumes with the standby support of neighboring districts. “There has definitely been concern up and down the valley this season, especially when the fuel-moisture content in brush and trees is appearing less than the content seen during the drought of 2002,” he said. On the other hand, bad blood and strong egos between districts disappeared long ago, Thompson said. “If we need something, we get it,” he said. “There are no territories, everyone is in this together to protect and serve our communities.” Amanda Charles writes frequently for the Aspen Times Weekly. Her last cover story on the marijuana industry was published April 19.

ASPEN TIMES FILE PHOTO/AP


VOYAGES

DESTINATION | NEW MEXICO

by SUSAN MONTOYA BRYAN

O’KEEFFE CONNECTS WITH THE OUTDOORS

This image provided by the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum shows “Black Place, Grey and Pink,” 1949, Georgia O’Keeffe Museum, gift of The Burnett Foundation.

GEORGIA O’KEEFFE could handle the inhospitable conditions of the American Southwest, with its intense sun and rugged terrain. Her clothes tell part of the story — jeans worn at the knees and sneakers scuffed. Her handwritten letters tell even more about the dust, the biting gnats, unpredictable rainstorms and the repeated struggles to get to some of New Mexico’s loneliest spots. The items along with camping gear and snapshots taken by the artist’s friends during some of their outdoor adventures are part of a yearlong exhibition opening May 11 at the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum in Santa

AP PHOTOS

Fe. The show highlights the stretches of high desert she called “the faraway” and the landscape paintings they inspired. There are stories of her bumping along primitive roads and finding refuge from the harsh sunlight in the back of her 1920s Ford Sedan. She would take out the driver’s seat and turn the passenger seat around. It was just enough room to set up a 30-by-40-inch canvas. Museum associate curator Carolyn Kastner pointed to one image of O’Keeffe by photographer Todd Webb. “It shows her beautiful artist hands, but they’re at work, paddling a rubber raft down the river,” she said. “It’s extraordinary.”

This 1944 image provided by the Georgia O’Keeffe Museum shows artist Georgia O’Keeffe at the Black Place in northwestern New Mexico.

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VOYAGES

DESTINATION | FRANCE

by THOMAS ADAMSON

IN FRANCE, CELEBRATE JOAN OF ARC’S 600TH BIRTHDAY

TOP: A statue of Joan of Arc with the French flag is seen in Orleans during the opening ceremony of the 600th anniversary of the birth of Joan of Arc, in Orleans, central France. BOTTOM: Pauline Finet, center, performs as Joan of Arc during the opening ceremony of the 600th anniversary of the birth of Joan of Arc, in Orleans, central France.

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THE NORMALLY TRANQUIL city of Orleans is buzzing with festivities to mark the 600th birthday of one of France’s best cultural exports: Joan of Arc. Looking appropriately cinematic, the Loire River swarmed with wooden boats carrying locals in medieval garb on May 1, reenacting Joan of Arc’s famous entry into the city in 1429. The day that saw Orleans liberated from English invaders has been dramatized in film the world over, most famously in 1948’s Oscar-winning epic of the French martyr with Ingrid Bergman, and more recently, in Luc Besson’s award-winning 1999 blockbuster with Milla Jovovich. In a testament to her international appeal, some 600 contemporary artists — from as far as the U.S., Japan and Russia — have made portraits of Joan of Arc through the ages that will be projected on the City Hall during the Festival, which ends May 13. Despite the enduring fame, it’s been a rocky ride for the teenage legend. At just 17, Joan led the French army to victory, only to be burned at the stake as a heretic two years later. She was heralded as a political symbol of the French far left during World War II, only to be snatched up as the mascot of the far right 30 years later. It seems like the only thing that anyone can agree on is that she is the ultimate French icon. “Everyone wants to appropriate her, and have their piece,” said Orleans deputy mayor, Jean-Pierre Gabelle, “but this festival will put her back where she belongs.”

AP PHOTO


AROUNDASPEN

The SOCIAL SIDE of TOWN

by MARY ESHBAUGH HAYES

EARLY ASPEN SKIERS SKIERS WHO CAME to Aspen in the early 1950s told some of their stories at the Aspen Business Luncheon at the Hotel Jerome on April 11. The old-timers were Ralph Melville, David Stapleton, Jackie Wogan, Connie Harvey, John Miller and Mary Eshbaugh Hayes. MARY Ralph told about ESHBAUGH HAYES building the Mountain Chalet in the early 1950s and how easy the process was at that time — not the rigamaroll that people have to go through to build today. He also related how he was thinking of putting a sign on the front of the Mountain Chalet saying, “Grand Entrance,” when the Ritz-Carlton built a huge hotel right behind him. David talked about the Jeep train in which he drove one of the Jeeps when the lift broke down and skiers had to be driven up the back of Aspen Mountain. He also described how scary it was for patrolmen when they had to rescue people from the stalled lift over Tourtelotte Park; they had to go hand-over-hand along the cable. Mary told how scared she was of the Number 2 Lift over Tourtelotte Park and how some days she just couldn’t get past Midway. She told how Jim Hayes tried to calm her fears when he hung by his knees from the footrest while going over Tourtelotte. Jackie told of being a waitress at the Red Onion so long ago and about all the young people who patronized the old bar and restaurant. Connie talked about the Wilderness Workshop, which she founded with Joy Caudill and Dottie Fox, and of the wilderness they have saved. John told how he and Bil Dunaway and Dave Farny had tried to create the Little Annie’s Ski Area on the back of Aspen Mountain. Undercurrent ... Lot splits, variances and megamansions are continuing to ruin many Aspen neighborhoods.

ASPEN SKIERS

Val and John Engels.

ASPEN SKIERS

Susan Saghatoleslami and Todd Shaver, who organizes the Business Luncheons at the Hotel Jerome.

ASPEN SKIERS

Jackie Wogan and her daughter, Judy Haas.

ASPEN SKIERS

From left are Gary Edens, Suellen Edens and Doug Riley.

ASPEN SKIERS From left are Realtors Lex Tarumianz, Scott Davidson and Brian Hazen.

ASPEN SKIERS From left are Martha Durgy and Gary Edens.

ASPEN SKIERS Mead and Diane Metcalf and George Beckendorf.

P H OTO S B Y M A RY E S H BA U G H H AY E S

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AROUND ASPEN

ASPEN SKIERS

From left are George Beckendorf, John Miller and Mary Eshbaugh Hayes.

ASPEN SKIERS Coming to the luncheon to hear their mothers speak were Pauli Hayes, left, and Judy Haas.

ASPEN SKIERS Eric Calderon and Jackie Wogan.

ASPEN SKIERS From left are speakers John and Kay Miller and Connie Harvey.

ASPEN SKIERS From left are Susan and Ralph Melville, Doug Riley and Randy Wedum.

ASPEN SKIERS From left are Bill Reilly, Sandi Reilly and Max Ben-Hamouz.

ASPEN SKIERS From left are Merbie Payne, Junee Kirk, David Stapleton and Patsy Malone.

ASPEN SKIERS

Speakers at the Early Aspen Skiers luncheon were Jackie Wogan, Ralph Melville and David Stapleton.

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âœŚ

May 10 -16, 2012

P H OTO S B Y M A RY E S H BA U G H H AY E S


CHAFFIN LIGHT

& Morris & Fyrwald

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Aspen | 970.925.6060 Snowmass | 970.923.2006 Basalt | 970.927.8080 Carbondale | 970.963.4536

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CURRENTEVENTS

MAY 10-16, 2012

LIVE ENTERTAINMENT THURSDAY, MAY 10 David Grier 7:30 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center, 0006 Woody Creek Plaza. WC3 presents acoustic guitarist David Grier. Doors open at 5:30 p.m. for food and drinks. For tickets and information, call 970922-2342 or email hilary@woodyc3.org. Sunspot Jonz and Aceyalone of Project Blowed 9 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. A founding member of Freestyle Fellowship, Aceyalone played an important role in the evolution of left-field hip-hop on the West Coast during an era when hard-core gangster rap reigned. Fast forward to 2007’s “Lightning Strikes,” a release inspired by reggae and dancehall music. Call 970-544-9800. SATURDAY, MAY 12 Greg Masse 8 p.m. - 11 p.m., Fine Line Bar & Grill, 60 El Jebel Road, El Jebel. Live music with a local musician. Call 970-673-6061. JAS Band Battle 2012 1 p.m. - 5 p.m., Sopris Park, Carbondale. Twenty bands compete in four hours. Presented in conjunction with Dandelion Days. Call 970-920-4996. Mason Jennings 10 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St., Aspen. Fresh off his new album, “Minnesota,” this pop-folk singer-songwriter is known for his intimate lyrics, hopeful themes and distinctive voice. Call 970-544-9800. TUESDAY, MAY 15 Haden Gregg and Friends 7 p.m. - 9:30 p.m., L’Hostaria, 620 E. Hyman Ave., Aspen. Live music every Tuesday. Call 970-925-9022. WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 Mishka and Anuhae 8:30 p.m. - 11:55 p.m., Belly Up Aspen, 450 S. Galena St. Mishka is an internationally known reggae artist from Bermuda. He released his first self-titled album in 1999 and had a hit single in the UK with “Give You All the Love.” He is currently touring in support of his latest album, “Talk About.” Hawaiian-born singer/songwriter Anuhea blends engaging lyrics, acoustic soul, pop, rap and reggae into a style that has earned her a reputation as Hawaii’s top female artist. Call 970-544-9800. Film screening: “Miss Representation” 7 p.m. - 9 p.m., Dos Gringos Cafe, 588 Highway 133, Carbondale. Free screening followed by a panel discussion. The evening is hosted by the Roaring Fork chapter of the Women’s Foundation of Colorado, www.wfco.org. To attend, RSVP at http://missreproaringfork.org. “Miss Representation,” which premiered at the 2011 Sundance Film Festival, was written and directed by Jennifer Siebel Newsom and exposes how mainstream media contribute to the underrepresentation of women in positions of power and influence in America. Call 303-548-1717.

THE ARTS THURSDAY, MAY 10 Basalt High School Art Show Noon - 8 p.m., Basalt High School gym. A showcase of student artwork. Call 970-384-6189. Music Appreciation Workshop 6:30 p.m. - 9 p.m., Third Street Center Round Room, Carbondale. Carbondale Council on Arts & Humanities offers a workshop in conjunction with the Aspen Music Festival and School. Susan Nicholson, music director at the Aspen Chapel, and Wick Moses, jazz enthusiast and KDNK DJ, team up to teach this workshop for adults on Thursdays, May 10 through June 28. The cost is $135 ($110 for CCAH members) and includes the concert ticket. Call 970-963-1680 or go online to register by May 7 at www.carbondalearts.com.

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Liev Schreiber, left, and Seann William Scott star in the hockey comedy “Goon,” showing May 16 and 17 at the Wheeler Opera House. Arts Club 3:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., Aspen Youth Center. In collaboration with the youth center, the Aspen Art Museum offers a free program of six in-center art classes after school. Activities include drawing, graffiti, collage, illustration, sculpture, pottery, painting, printing and more. The classes conclude with a student-hung installation and family-and-friends gallery reception at the center. Limit is eight students per class; register at the youth center on the Monday prior to the class. Exhibition is May 24 from 5 to 6:30 p.m. For grades four through eight. (No class on May 3.) Call 970-544-4130. Evening of the Arts 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Aspen High School. This annual one-day event features the work of the wood, performing and visual art departments. The show, “Art Speaks,” will begin with performances in the Black Box at 6 p.m. The Black Box Gallery reception begins at 7 p.m. The exhibit will continue through May 11. Call 970-925-3760, ext. 1167. Intermediate Ballet 9 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., ASFB studios, downstairs at Colorado Mountain College, 0245 Sage Way, Aspen. Aspen Santa Fe Ballet offers intermediate adult ballet class. Drop-ins welcome. Call 970-925-7175, ext. 106. Art with Liz Frazier 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Woody Creek Community Center. Explore drawing with artist and teacher Liz Frazier. She studied in Italy and at the Corcoran and has had numerous shows nationwide. Bring charcoal, soft graphite pencils, watercolor and or acrylic materials. $15 for WC3 members; $20 for nonmembers. Call 970922-2342. FRIDAY, MAY 11 Basalt High School Art Show Noon - 8 p.m., Basalt High School gym. A showcase of student artwork. Call 970-384-6189.

Triple Threat Musical Theater Workshop, Red Brick Center Studio and AHS Black Box. An intense weekend, May 11 through 13, for students ages 10 to 18. Broadway professionals will strengthen one’s foundation in the basics, and take participants’ skills to the next level. Call 970-925-9313. Ballet Technique Noon - 1 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Classical ballet technique for adults and teens — beginning level. Call 970-379-2187. MONDAY, MAY 14 Summer Art Camp Sign-up, Wyly Community Art Center, 99 Midland Ave., Basalt. Registration in progress for Sculpture and Photography Art Camp with Lois Devine and Catherine Adams on June 11 through 14 for ages 7 to 11 (6-yearolds with special approval). Registration is required. Figurative sculpture class of dragons and fairies with Devine in the mornings and photographing Basalt with Adams in the afternoons. Cost is $185 plus $25 for art supplies. Members receive 10 percent off. Go to www.wylyarts.org to register. Call 970-927-4123. TUESDAY, MAY 15 “Taking Flight” 10 a.m. - 5 p.m., Willits Town Center, 540 E. Valley Road, Basalt. “Taking Flight” is a pop-up art installation and working studio by local artists Deborah Jones and Lara Whitley, who work in collage, sculpture and painting. Partnering with Willits Town Center, the artists have moved into an empty storefront to temporarily revitalize the space with art. Over its fiveweek run, “Taking Flight” will continually evolve and expand, changing each day with the addition of new work created both onsite and for the site. Open Tuesday through Saturday days, plus Friday nights, or by appointment, through May 20. Call 970-3098908 or 970-618-6992.

Intermediate Ballet 9 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., ASFB studios, downstairs at Colorado Mountain College, 0245 Sage Way, Aspen. Aspen Santa Fe Ballet offers intermediate adult ballet class. Drop-ins welcome. Call 970-925-7175, ext. 106. WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 RFHS Student Art Opening 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Roaring Fork High School auxiliary gym, 2270 Highway 133, Carbondale. Opening night for an exhibit featuring works by Roaring Fork High School students, with live music by the RFHS music students, food and drink, and a silent art auction to benefit the art program. Exhibit continues May 17 and 18 from 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. each day. Call 970-384-5767. Adult Ballet Class 6:30 p.m. - 8 p.m., Third Street Center, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Offered by the school of Aspen Santa Fe Ballet. Beginning and intermediate ballet. Barre and floor work. Call 970-925-7175, ext. 106. Intermediate Classical Ballet 4 p.m. - 5:30 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Classical ballet technique for intermediate-level dancers. Call 970-379-2187.

YOGA & EXERCISE THURSDAY, MAY 10 Vinyasa Flow Yoga 10 a.m. - 11:15 a.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Carbondale. Class for all levels. Call 970 379-8108. SATURDAY, MAY 12 Ying and Yang Yoga Workshop 4 p.m. - 6 p.m., Aspen Health and Harmony, El Jebel. Explore Yin Yoga — long-held floor poses to help harmonize major internal organs. This workshop will include a clear introduction to Yin Yoga with focus on heart and lungs: circulation and respiration. A moderately paced Yang flow will balance the practice. Call 970-704-9642.

COURTESY MAGNET RELEASING


edited by RYAN SLABAUGH

Yoga: Moving Toward Steadiness 11 a.m. - noon, Aspen Health and Harmony, El Jebel. Faith Lipori leads yoga for people with Parkinson’s disease. Yoga increases flexibility, strength and balance, allowing for more ease of movement. A sense of well-being comes from the practice that can reduce the emotional aspects of Parkinson’s, such as depression, anxiety and fatigue. Open to those with Parkinson’s and their friends and caretakers. Call 970704-9642. MONDAY, MAY 14 Aikido 7 p.m. - 8:30 p.m., Colorado Mountain College, Aspen campus. Aikido is an effective self-defense as well as a fun and dynamic workout. Class offered Mondays and Wednesdays. Beginners welcome. Try the first class for free. Call 970-379-4676. Karate for Tots 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Helps develop motor skills, hand-eye coordination, focus, respect and self-confidence in a fun way. Drop-in fee is $15. For ages 4 to 6. Call 970-920-5140.

THE COMMUNITY

RELIGION

FRIDAY, MAY 11 Aspen High School Scholarship and Award Ceremony 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Wheeler Opera House, Aspen. Members of the graduating class of 2012 will be presented with scholarships and awards from the community. All community members are welcome to attend. Call 970-925-3760, ext. 1175.

SUNDAY, MAY 13 Buddhist Meditation and Mindfulness 9 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., 549 Main St., Carbondale. Practical, approachable and livable meditation training integrated with modern life. For more information, call 970-6181032 or 970-379-8422.

SATURDAY, MAY 12 CRMS Plant Sale 9 a.m. - 3 p.m., Colorado Rocky Mountain School, Carbondale. Featuring a selection of organic tomatoes, herbs, vegetables and perennial and annual flowers sale continues May 13 from noon to 3 p.m. Call 970-963-2562. Aspen Brain Bash 10 a.m. - 1 p.m., Yellow Brick School, 215 N. Garmisch St., Aspen. An array of fun activities for kids, ages 0 to 11. Each activity proven to stimulate healthy brain development in children. Call 970-236-6170.

Aspen Chapel Sunday Service 9:30 a.m. - 10:30 a.m., 0077 Meadowood Drive, Aspen. The chapel, located next to the roundabout, offers a Sunday service, promoting an open and progressive theology, spiritual enrichment, and peace through interfaith engagement. Everyone is welcome. For more information, contact 970-925-7184 or info@aspenchapel.org. Christ Episcopal Worship 8 a.m., Christ Episcopal Church, 536 N. Fifth St., Aspen. Holy Communion rite I at 8 a.m. service. Holy Eucharist rite II at 10 a.m. Call 970923-0122.

TUESDAY, MAY 15 Buddhist Meditation and Mindfulness 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., 549 Main St., Carbondale. An advanced class series on Tuesdays. Call 970-618-1032 or 970-379-8422 for more information. Challenged by Christianity? 5 p.m., Aspen Community Church fellowship room, 200 E. Bleeker St. What does it mean to be a Christian? What does the Bible say about loving one’s neighbor, peace, forgiveness and relationships? Ralph Melville teaches and leads the discussion. Call 970-9257683. WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 Crossroads Midweek 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., 726 W. Francis St., Aspen. Free dinner at 6 p.m. followed by nondenominational worship service. Call 970-925-7828.

Pole Dance Workout 6 p.m. - 7 p.m., 580 Main St., Carbondale. Mixed-level pole dance workout from 6 to 7 p.m. Beginners welcome. Learn spins, lifts, dance, floor work and pole safety. From 7 to 8 p.m., it’s Honey’s Booty Workout — use pole dance lifts, dance and floor moves for a total-body workout. All levels welcome. Call 970-2741564. Zumba Blast 6:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m., PAC3, Third Street Center, Carbondale. Highenergy dance fitness class combines Latin and international music and easy-to-follow steps taught by a professional Latin dancer. Everybody is welcome. Classes are bilingual. Call 818-640-6482. TUESDAY, MAY 15 Tots Zumbatomics 9:30 a.m. - 10:15 a.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Fitness fun for 4- to 6-year-olds, helping increase focus and self-confidence, boost metabolism and enhance coordination. $10 drop-in fee. Call 970-920-5140. Intermediate Pilates/Vinyasa Yoga Noon - 1 p.m., 520 S. Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. Pilates mat work for intermediates at noon. Vinyasa flow yoga for all levels at 5:30 p.m. Call 970-379-2187. Vinyasa Flow Yoga 5:30 p.m. - 6:45 p.m., Coredination, 520 S. Third St., Suite 7, Carbondale. A class for all levels. Call 970379-8108. WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 Mixed Martial Arts 2 p.m. - 5 p.m., Aspen Recreation Center. Featuring various forms of self-defense that promote respect and confidence in a fun, controlled class. Six- to 9-year-olds from 2 to 3 p.m. and 9- to 14year-olds from 3:45 to 4:45 p.m. $15 drop-in fee. Call 970-920-5140. Aspen Cycling Club Racing 6 p.m. - 8 p.m., Location varies. Join a weekly cycling series, alternating between mountain- and roadbike races. Go to http://aspencyclingclub. org for schedule. Call 970-922-2000. Sign-up: Coed Softball, Crown Mountain Park, El Jebel. Registration deadline is May 25 or when league fills for first coed softball league to be played at Crown Mountain Park. Games on Wednesdays starting at 6 p.m. Season is June 6 to Aug. 8, with playoffs and prizes. Cost is $495 per team; eight teams max with a minimum of three women per team. A $100 deposit secures a spot; all fees due before first game. Call 970-963-6030.

Rhode Island rock band Deer Tick, led by singer John McCauley, right, will play May 11 at Belly Up.

TUESDAY, MAY 15 LINX Networking Group 7 a.m. - 8:30 a.m., Chaffin and Light building, downtown Basalt. Weekly meeting of a business networking organization whose members work together to grow and promote their businesses. New members welcome. Call 970-309-8108. WEDNESDAY, MAY 16 Carbondale Rotary 7 a.m. - 8 a.m., Carbondale Fire Station. Weekly Rotary Club meeting. Call 970-927-9112.

Crossroads Church Worship 8 a.m. - 12 p.m., 726 W. Francis St., Aspen. Sunday services offered at 8, 9:30 and 11 a.m. and at 6 p.m. Call 970-925-7828. Sunday Worship 9:30 a.m., Basalt Community United Methodist Church. Worship with children’s church and fellowship at a parish with an active, progressive congregation. Call 970-379-4643. Sunday Worship Service 9:30 a.m. - 11 a.m., Aspen Community Church, 200 E. Bleeker St. Sunday worship. Everyone welcome. Communion service held the first Sunday of each month. Call 970-925-1571. Worship in Thomasville 7 p.m., Thomasville Community United Methodist Church, 24523 Frying Pan Road, Thomasville. Worship in an historic one-room schoolhouse. Call 970-379-4643.

PHOTO BY STEWART OKSENHORN

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

35


LOCAL

MARKETPLACE

"VUP 1IPUP "ET

PLACE AN AD >> ASPENTIMES.COM/PLACEAD | (970) 925-9937 | FAX (970) 925-5647 | CLASSIFIEDS@ASPENTIMES.COM | MORE AT ASPENTIMES.COM 1901 Replica Stagecoach

Audi A4 Avant Quattro 2006

AUDI A8 - 2000

Chevrolet Trail Blazer LS 2006

&9"$5 3&1-*$" 45"(&$0"$) "-- "55"$).&/54 */$-6%&% ."3#-& $0 (PPE DPOEJUJPO

"VEJ " "WBOU 2VBUUSP &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO , "VUP - 5VSCP -FBUIFS )FBUFE TFBUT &YUSB TFU "MV NJOVN XIFFMT BOE TOPX UJSFT

&YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO NJMFT "MM PQUJPOT /"7 EJTD TLJ CBH FUD 5XP TFUT SJNT BOE UJSFT

&YUFOEFE 4QPSU 6UJMJUZ %PPS $ZMJO EFS -JUFS 8% .JMFBHF (PPE $POEJUJPO 4FNJ OFX UJSFT "VUPNBUJD XJUI B 5PX 1BDLBHF SE 3PX 4FBUJOH Asking $12,000.00 970-393-3804

$18,375 970-925-2837 joeldsax@aol.com Ford Escape Hybrid 2009

13,250 970-404-0273

$9,999 970-376-8245

FORD F250 CREW CAB 4x4 - 2003

Freightliner FL60 2000

GMC Envoy 2002

GMC Itasca 1978

18 MPDLT BJS CFE -FFS DBQ , NJMFT -BODF 16 DBNQFS NPEFM TUPWF NJDSP GVMM CBUI FMFDU KBDLT -SH GVSOBDF XJOUFS QLH WFSZ HPPE DPOE GPS UIF UXP XJMM TFQB SBUF 5SVDL $BNQFS

(PPE DPOEJUJPO .BOVBM USBOTNJTTJPO $VNNJOT %JFTFM XIJUF $9,000 970-948-1369 eric@paddywacks.comcastbiz.net

(.$ &OWPZ 4QPSUT QBDLBHF EPPS , NJMFT "OESFX $6500 970-379-2257

(.$ *UBTDB .PUPS IPNF (FOUMZ VTFE DPOEJUJPO "VUP USBOTNJTTJPO FOHJOF NBUEPHUPXJOH!IPUNBJM DPN

Horse Trailer - 1993

Jeep Grand Cherokee 1998

Jeep Grand Cherokee 2007

Jeep Liberty 2004 Limited Edition

)PSTF 4MBOU 5SBJMFS XJUI SBNQ UBDL ESFTTJOH SPPN &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO /P SVTU OFX QBJOU OFX SVCCFS NBUT TQBSF UJSF $5500 Call Tom 970-948-2279

+FFQ (SBOE $IFSPLFF -JNJUFE FEJUJPO 0OF PXOFS , 7 UPX TLJE QMBUF QLH 4JMWFS %BSL (SFZ

8% -JUFS 7 XJUI NJMFT %BSL HSBZ XJUI MJHIU HSBZ MFBUIFS JOUF SJPS BOE VQHSBEFE TPVOE TZTUFN 0SJHJOBMMZ SFUBJMFE GPS L

+FFQ -JCFSUZ -JNJUFE &EJUJPO 0OMZ , NJMFT &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO "VUP 5SBOTNJTTJPO )FBUFE -FBUIFS 4FBUT 4VOSPPG /FX .VE 4OPX 5JSFT 4JMWFS #MBDL *OUFSJPS +VTU , 0#0!

Land Rover Defender 90 1995

Lexus ES300 2000

LEXUS ES330 SPORTDESIGN 2004

Lexus LX470 1999

TQFFE 4BGBSJ (BSE CVNQFS BOE SPDL TMJEFST #PSMB TT FYIBVTU 4VQFS 8JODI 8JMEFSOFTT SBDL NJMFT CSPXOEPH!TPQSJT OFU $29,500 970-963-1924

-FYVT &4 EPPS (PPE DPOEJUJPO "VUP USBOTNJTTJPO #JLF SBDLT (PME ,BUF 5,300 970-319-4476

7FSZ HPPE DPOEJUJPO *NNBDVMBUFMZ NBJOUBJOFE , -PBEFE /FX UJSFT CSBLFT UJNJOH CFMU $13,300 970-524-0580 970-471-9097

-&964 -9 .*-&4

MG Kit Car - 1954

Polaris Ranger 6x6 - 2000

Range Rover 2008

Ski Doo Snowmobile Package

Starcraft Trailer 2002

4PGU UPQ DPOWFSUJCMF XJUI 7PMLTXBHPO NPUPS &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO

5JMU CFE UXP HVO SBDLT BOE XJODI *ODMVEFT Y SFBS -PBEJOH USBJMFS &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO

3"/(& 307&3 4VQFS $IBSHFE -PBEFE NJMFT

Asking 4500.00 Call (970) 379-0178

Asking $6000.00 Call (970) 379-0178

$53,000 970-618-2662

4LJ %PP 4VNNJU 9 BOE 4VNNJU "ESFOBMJOF -PX NJMFT NJOU DPOEJUJPO .JSBHF FODMPTFE USBJMFS -PUT PG FYUSBT BOE HFBS 8PSUI L CVU UBLFT BMM UPEBZ +FGG $14,000

GU CVU FYUFOET UP GU XJUI CFET PVU (SFBU DPOEJUJPO FWFSZUIJOH XPSLT -FTT UIBO IST PG VTF 1JD UVSFT BWBJMBCMF VQPO SFRVFTU $8000 OBO Inquiries, please email: rachellewagoner@yahoo.com

Toyota Pick-Up 1981

Toyota Tacoma 2006

VW Passat 2007

YAMAHA VIRAGO 750 - 1990

Auto Photo Ads Work!

-0"%&% L 7 MFBUIFS (3&"5 HBT NJMFBHF $18,000 970-456-2853

HARLEY DAVIDSON FLSTS 2005

5POF #MVF 4JMWFS .JOU $POEJUJPO -PX .JMFT ,JOH 8JOETIJFME .BOZ &YUSBT $11,990 970-920-6850

Land Rover 110 1971

5IJT POF PG B LJOE USVDL JT B TQFDJBM GJOE 7FSZ VOJRVF XJMM OPU GJOE BOPUIFS MJLF JU Asking $18,900. OBO 970-309-1261

SOLD!

$13,750 Call 970-390-9787 if interested.

$2900.00 970-379-2411

$14,500 970-618-2662

Call or go online to sell your car 925-9937 www.aspentimes.com/placead

NJMFT GBOUBTUJD TIBQF NVTU TFF /P DSBDLT JO EBTI CPBSE OP SJQT JO TFBU JO WFSZ HPPE TIBQF CSBOE OFX UJSFT ZPV DBO BMNPTU FBU PGG PG FOHJOF $6500. REDUCED! 970-309-1261

36

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

Рюд

"DDFTT $BC EPPS GPPU CFE 7 53% 0GG SPBE QBDLBHF TQFFE NBOVBM OFX TOVHUPQ NJMFT TFDPOE PXOFS &YDFMMFOU $POEJUJPO

5 8PMGTCVSH &EJUJPO , GSFTI TZOUIFUJD PJM OFX CSBLF QBET FYDFM MFOU DPOEJUJPO OFX XJOUFS UJSFT SFMPDBUJPO

0OMZ , NJMFT &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO

Asking $17,000

$10,600 970-306-2391

970-376-2180 ly9f@aol.com

May 10 -16, 2012

$2400.00

Thousands of other autos have ALREADY sold!


L.L.C. All Breed Obedience Training

Since 1982 970-963-1287

&YDBWBUJPO Little Digs Excavation - Utilities - Sewer Lines - Foundations - Retaining Walls - Grading - Demolition

970-928-0486 )FBUJOH $PPMJOH 1MVNCJOH

quickmediationservices@ gmail.com 1/10 the cost of a lawyer Willing to travel • Servicing all areas

.BTTBHF 5IFSBQZ The Most Amazing Full Body Massage by Exceptional Masseuse in Aspen Area Only. Private/VIP. Outcall 300+/session. Call Anytime: 1.646.244.6103

Feel the power. 80 percent of adults in households earning $100,000 or more read a newspaper in print or online each week.

"SUT $SBGUT )PCCJFT

970-309-3788

Rare Paul Pascarella 1BJOUJOH $BSCPOEBMF $P 4VQFSC DPOEJUJPO

)PNF *NQSPWFNFOU 3FNPEFM Home Improvement Small Projects Finished ON TIME

970.618.4100

$MFBOJOH 4FSWJDF Crystal Clear Cleaning )PVTF ,FFQJOH 4FSWJD FT 3FTJEFOUJBM $PN NFSDJBM $POTUSVDUJPO 0GGJDF $MFBOJOH (970)379-3300

$PODSFUF $FNFOU

SPECIAL May 1/2 Price Driveway Cleaning & Sealing Redstone Concrete

39 Years in Service Estimates - Color Design - Samples Doug Kelso dpkaspen@gmail.com • 970-948-5513 627 w. main st. aspen 81611

970-309-3788

Pam Ruzicka

$POTUSVDUJPO

1BJOUJOH

Complete Professional Painting Services

*OTVSBODF

970.379.9705

www.insurance4uco.com

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$MPUIJOH

1 M F B T F D B M M

Handmade ladies Boot, -JCFSUZ #PPU $PNQBOZ i"NJF TJ[F .PSF QJDT POMJOF BU XXX MJCFSUZCPPUDP DP N TFBSDI "NJF 8PSO POF UJNF GPS MFTT UIBO BO IPVS #PPU SF UBJMT GPS BOE VQ (SFBU QSJDF GPS B IBOENBEF CPPU

'VSOJUVSF )PNF 'VSOJTIJOHT

-0( #"3 4500-4 &9$- $0/%*5*0/

UJSFT XIFFMT GPS )VNNFS ) WFSZ HPPE DPOE 0#0

$PVDI XJUI 4JUUJOH $IBJS BOE 0UUPNBO DPNCP

$1,500

.645 4&-- The Lawn Ranger :PVS MPDBM MBXODBSF TVQFSIFSP

GARAGE SALE UIJT XFFLFOE .BZ BN QN BU 8JMMJUT5PXO $FOUFS OFBS ,JUDIFO $PMMBHF #JLFT GVSOJUVSF UPPMT UPZT CBCZ LJUDIFO IPVTFXBSFT DPOTUSVD UJPO TQPSUJOH FUD %&"-4 JODMVEJOH , (SBOE 1JBOP GPS , 0#0 +JN 4VQQPSU "TQFO $PN NVOJUZ 4DIPPM XJUI ZPVS D EPOBUJPO Special thanks to Willits!

Gaggia Platinum Vogue BVUPNBUJD FTQSFTTP NBLFS 5IJT NPEFM JT GJUUFE XJUI UIF NBOVBM DVQ MJGU & QMVT 4ZTUFN BOE QSF EJTQPTJUJPO UP NJML JTMBOE 6TFE WFSZ HPPE DPOEJUJPO Call 970-748-2947 and leave a message.

$375.00 FOR BOTH.

CASH no checks. 970-456-3291 Rifle

Gosh, thanks. More than 71 percent of adults read a newspaper in print or online each week.

%FUPY 'JSN 5JHIUFO "TL NF IPX XXX TUZMFTFBU DPN EFU PYXJUITIBOOPO

Hoarders be gone. Advertise your cleaning business in the Service Directory. Always in print and online. ClassiďŹ eds@ cmnm.org.

5)*/, "/% '&&- -*,& :06h3& "("*/ 3FWPMVUJPOBSZ 4VQQMFNFOU *NQSPWFT .PPE .FNPSZ &YFSDJTF &OEVSBODF &OFSHZ BOE *OUJNBDZ 1IZTJDJBO %FWFMPQFE #6: (&5 '3&& PS UIFCSBJOWJUBNJO DPN

)PVTFXBSFT

SOLD!!

3&165"#-& (0-% 4.*5) QBZJOH $"4) GPS HPME TJMWFS QMBUJ OVN KFXFMSZ HPME PS TJMWFS DPJOT OVHHFUT TUFSMJOH TJMWFS TFUT .BOZ MPZBM DVTUPN FST UIBOL NF GPS #&45 3&563/4 #&45 4&3 7*$& BOE DPOWFOJFOU BQQPJOUNFOUT * 3FDZDMF 3FNBLF BOE 3FQBJS 'PS UPEBZhT TQPU TFF ronthegoldguy.com $BMM 3PO

_4VCMFST /VSTFSZ_ #SJTUMFDPOF 'PYUBJM 1JOF QFS GU /BUJWF &OHMFNBO 4QSVDF QFS GU -BSHF "TQFO $MVNQT ] 1MBOUJOH %FMJWFSZ "WBJMBCMF ] $BMM PS 5FYU ] -PDBUFE JO #VFOB 7JTUB

NEW OFWFS CFFO VTFE TUJMM JO UIF QMBTUJD 3Y 1SFTDSJQUJPO ,BZBL TQFDT PO UIF MBCFM 3Y 4 3 #4 03(

Call 970 390 0998

)VOUJOH

‘Breadman Plus’ Breadmaker, FYDM DPOEJUJPO 0#0

SOLD!!!

Elk Mount: (SFBU OPO UZQJDBM CVMM XJUI ESPQ UJOFT 4DPSFT 0 # 0 PS

1FUT %PHT

"MM 5FSSBJO 7FIJDMFT -BCSBEPPEMFT "MM DPMPST MPX OPO TIFE (SFBU G B N J M Z Q F U T XXX MBCSBEPPEMF CSF FEFS DPN 3FTFSWF ZPVST UPEBZ :BNBIB 8BSSJPS TQFFE 3VOT HSFBU 4FBU JT B MJUUMF XPSO BOE JU XJMM OFFE OFX UJSFT

#JDZDMFT .PQFET

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REDUCED: $325.00. CASH - NO CHECKS

RON"THE GOLD GUY "

$BOPFT ,BZBLT 3PX #PBUT

-BXO (BSEFO

)FBMUI #FBVUZ

"VUP 1BSUT "DDFTTPSJFT 4.* QSJEFT JUTFMG PO ZFBST PG QSPWJEJOH UPQ RVBMJUZ DSBGUTNBOTIJQ BOE FYQFSUJTF JO UIF 3PBSJOH 'PSL 7BJM 7BM MFZT 3FTJEFOUJBM DPN NFSDJBM OFX DPOTUSVD UJPO SFNPEFM -FU VT IFMQ ZPV NBYJNJ[F ZPVS IBSE FBSOFE IPNF JN QSPWFNFOU EPMMBS $ISJT XXX TP QSJTNPVOUBJO OFU

#FBVUJGVM (JSMT #FESPPN 4FU %JMMPO &YDFMMFOU DPOEJUJPO DMBZCSPPLC!DPNDBTU OF U ESFTTFSX NJSSPS UXJO MBUUJDF CFE DIFTU OJHIU TUBOE

970-618-0120

Specializing in Closets, Storage, Kitchen & Bath Design

".* )PNF *OTQFDUJPO 3BEPO 5FTUJOH 1SF 1VSDIBTF *OTQFDUJPO 'VMM *OTVSBODF *OTQFDUJPOT "EE 8PSL 4DPQF GPS '3&& BTQFOBNJ!HNBJM DPN

CASH no checks 970-456-3291 Rifle

www.hillarymassage.net

mwhite@aspenwhitestar.com

*OTQFDUJPO

Please Recycle

REDUCED: $265.00.

$PVDI DPGGFF UBCMF FOE UBCMFT 0BL BSNPJSF DPNQVUFS EFTL $BMM GPS QSJDFT

LOCALS Appreciation ~50% OFF MASSAGE~ $75/hr. limited time Call Hillary TODAY!

5SBOTQPSUBUJPO

May 1/2 Price Driveway Cleaning & Sealing Redstone Concrete

$PNFT XJUI DVTUPN GMPPS NBU .BJO QBSU PG EFTL wXJEF Y w EFFQ Y w UBMM 0UIFS QBSU PG EFTL w XJEF Y w EFFQ ESBXFST

(BSBHF :BSE 4BMFT

"QQMJBODFT

4QSJOH 4QFDJBM %JTDPVOU

Office Desk Heavy Duty EXCELLENT CONDITION. AWESOME DESK!

3 6 4 5 * $ 1 * / & "3.0*3 Y Y $BSCPOEBMF

"TQIBMU 1BWJOH

SPECIAL

MUST SELL!!!

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Call or Email:

Quick Mediation Services 970-402-7816

'VSOJUVSF )PNF 'VSOJTIJOHT

5SFDL .5 JO CJLFT CPZT HJSMT FBDI $BSCPOEBMF 4VQFSC DPOEJUJPO "SUIVS

#PBUT #PBUJOH 4VQQMJFT 64&% 3"'54 GU 7BOHVBSE 4# &YDFMMFOU $POEJUJPO (SFH !5JNCFSMJOF 5PVST &BHMF $0

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-JWFTUPDL "OJNBMT

CONFLICT? NEED RESOLUTION?

'VSOJUVSF )PNF 'VSOJTIJOHT

3FDSFBUJPO

-FHBM 4FSWJDF

.FSDIBOEJTF

4FSWJDF %JSFDUPSZ

%PH 5SBJOJOH

A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

37


#VJMEJOH

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High tech business with a low marketing budget? Advertise your computer company in the Service Directory. ClassiямБeds@ cmnm.org

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38

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Find a job

ONLINE

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A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

тЬж

STAFF HOUSING (SFBU GPS TFBTPOBM FNQMPZFFT JOUFSOT NVTJD TUVEFOUT DPO TUSVDUJPO DSFXT UFN QPSBSZ IPVTJOH

Summer housing available now in Snowmass Village $525/mo

Search locally or expand your search throughout the mountains and beyond. -JDFOTFE 3FBM &TUBUF "TTJTUBOU 'V MM U JNF NJO JN VN ZFBST SFBM FTUBUF FYQFSJFODF LOPXMFEHF PG 'MFY BOE DPOUSBDUT )JHI UFDI GBTU QBDFE FOWJSPONFOU #BTBMU PGGJDF FNBJM SFTVNF 3&DP!HNBJM DPN &YFDVUJWF "ENJOJTUSB UJWF "TTJTUBOU

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May 10 -16, 2012

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$49,500,000 Matt & Ryan Podskoch 303 579 2725 The Global Real Estate Network LLC

ASPEN

COMMERCIAL-GLENWOOD SPRINGS

COMMERCIAL - GYPSUM

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Commercial Development

NEW CASTLE

ASPEN

$425,000.00 buys all 5 studios

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$1,399,000

Please call Chad Brasington, Prudential Colorado Properties DIBE!WBJM OFU

Mogli Cooper Plan B Real Estate 970-366-6000

GLENWOOD SPRINGS

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GLENWOOD SPRINGS

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$530,000

Raymi Goodman The Luxury Team @Aspen Real Estate XXX 3BZNJ(PPENBO DPN

$485,000

Raymi Goodman The Luxury Team @ Aspen Real Estate XXX 3BZNJ(PPENBO DPN

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Gosh. We’d like to make $5,000 a week working from home, too –– just like the con behind the scheme. We work hard to ensure the credibility and quality of our advertisements, so please contact us immediately if you have concerns about a print or online Classified ad. Call 866.850.9937 or email classifieds@cmnm.org

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A S P E N T I M E S . C O M / W E E K LY

41


WORDPLAY

INTELLIGENT EXERCISE

by KRIS KING of HIGH COUNTRY NEWS

BOOK REVIEW

NOTEWORTHY

‘EXTREMOPHILIA’ IF YOU’RE NOT FAMILIAR with the term “extremophilia,” don’t worry. As Missoula, Mont., author Fred Haefele explains, “It’s a genuine neologism. A freshly minted word. It refers to someone with an intemperate love of extremophiles, those intrepid little organisms that manage to thrive in the most hostile environments on earth.” Haefele is a self-described “writer and author for hire” best known for his memoir, “Rebuilding the Indian,” in which he paralleled his approach to middle age with his restoration of a “basket case” classic motorcycle. His essays have been published in a wide variety of magazines; this new book

by TRACY GRAY | edited by WILL SHORTZ

contains 20 years’ worth of them, on topics ranging from an ice-ageto-present-day view of Missoula to Stanford University during Haefele’s Wallace Stegner fellowship to Evel Knievel’s funeral in Butte. What the essays have in common is a deep, but never sentimental, affection for the West. Haefele left New England as a young man, a tree surgeon deeply influenced by Ken Kesey’s work and drawn by the mythology of the West. “Extremophilia’s” stories are grounded in Haefele’s experiences as a logger, firefighter, teacher, father and motorcycle aficionado. Haefele’s tales of Western culture, characters and places are both casual

1

INFRACTIONS

2

3

4

5

20

6

1 5 13 20 21 22 23 25 26 27 28 29 30 33 36 40 41 43 44 45 48 50 51

53

57 61 64 65 67

42

It has eyes that can’t see Flips Student of morality Philippine money Pacific strings Fine word for libraries? With 26-Across, like grandchildren Beach bottles See 23-Across Deck out Bad record part, for short “For shame!” Ancient parting place With 44-Across, execute, in a way Keen observer Prefix with cycle Pond fish ___-d’Or, Québec See 33-Across With 50-Across, euphoric Ankle bone See 45-Across Product with the old ad catchphrase “Mother, please, I’d rather do it myself!” Faith that celebrates both Jesus and Muhammad Superlatively strong Initially Scaredy-cat, maybe Sacred music composer ___ Pärt Trig inverse

71

74 75 77 78 80

82 86 87 90

91 94

98 101 102 103 104 105 108 111 112 113 115 120 122

125

A S P E N T I M E S W E E K LY

County subdivision: Abbr. With 77-Across, high-end retail chain Neighbor of Bulg. Botanical beards See 71-Across Grove Political party that won 39 electoral votes in 1948 “Apparently” Panache They’re fit for kings and queens Poet who wrote “In the room the women come and go / Talking of Michelangelo” What’s left behind With 103-Across, 1999 Shyamalan thriller Part of AARP: Abbr. Fury ___ Records (old music label) See 94-Across What’s left With 112-Across, compromise Later Abbr. on many food labels See 105-Across Ancient Balkan region Stinko Like some interpretations With 127-Across, classical work that’s the source of the European Union’s anthem Dancer Duncan

126 127 128 129

Military depots See 122-Across They have scales Gave, as a hot potato 130 Peter, e.g.

38 39 42 46 47 48

DOWN 1 2 3

Bind Phnom ___ Possible candidate for rehab 4 Old Italian magistrate 5 Word with top or pop 6 Fine, in old slang 7 “1984” superpower 8 Blue-gray 9 Be fooled 10 Et ___ (and others) 11 “Star Trek: T.N.G.” role 12 “The Mary Tyler Moore Show” Emmy winner 13 The West was part of it 14 Promises 15 Become fixed 16 The Rams of the N.C.A.A. 17 “Ditto!” 18 George Bush’s chief of staff John 19 Person doing a practice run 24 Poetic “always” 31 Biblical suffix 32 Dr. ___ 34 ___-garde 35 Neighbors of C notes 36 What letting off steam might result in 37 Operating without ___

May 10 -16, 2012

49 52 54

55

56 58 59 60 62

63 65 66 68 69 70 72 73 76 79 81 82 83 84 85 88 89

Zigzagged Trouser parts ___ mission New faces on bases Brewer’s vessel Gherman ___, cosmonaut who was the second human to orbit the earth Jobs for dentists Venae ___ Musical with the song “Easy to Be Hard” The Piazzale Michelangelo affords a view of it Detail R&B singer Hayes Glacial formation Part of A.B.S.: Abbr. World capital once occupied by France Fly off the handle Flavor akin to fennel Quickly accelerate Iotas Order in the court Sprite ___ same mind Prefix with resort Muted Fisher with a grig Agitated, after “in” Beijing-toShanghai dir. One from Germany Nature’s pillow? Put back And everything else, for short Death personified, in ancient Greece

36

37

38

39

12

13

31

33 41

42

47

58

59

76

86

87

99

92

100

44

62

66

55

56

83

84

85

117

118

119

67 74

78

88

79

89

90

94

101

95

102

106

107

111

112

113

96

97

103 108

104

109

110

114

115

122

123

116

124

125

126

127

128

129

130

Colonial service Colored parts Bonelike “Henry & June” role 97 Outside: Prefix 98 2009 Hilary Swank biopic 99 Gender offender 100 Like a nasal membrane 102 Rescued damsel’s cry 106 Others, in Oaxaca

19

63

82

105

92 93 95 96

18

54

73

93

121

43

53

77 81

91

17

49

72

80

35

61 65

71

34

52

60

64

75

16

29

48

51

70

15

28

32

46

69

14

25

40

57

120

11

22

50

98

10

27

45

68

9

This book review originally appeared in the April 16 issue of High Country News (www.hcn.org).

24

30

68

8

and transcendent, although most tend to have a requisite lesson. After much reflecting on a reunion river trip with his adult children, Haefele concludes, “To simply live to tell the story — maybe that’s all the trip was about after all.”

21

23 26

ACROSS

7

“Extremophilia: River Rats, Timber Tramps, Biker Trash, and Realtors: New and Selected Writings” Fred Haefele 145 pages Paperback: $16.95 Bangtail Press, 2011

107 109 110 114 116 117 118 119 121 123 124

Up Cousin of rust Korean money Sleep stages “Freedom ___ free” ___ Lowry, children’s writer City in Sicily Silhouette on many a yellow sign Child-care author LeShan Cat scanner? “___ Beso”

— Last week’s puzzle answers — A R B O L

R E A T A

A S T O N

C I T E D

U C L A

T A U S

R T E

A B F A B

D I O N E

E S K I M O D O G S

S H E S

H O S P

O R C A

I B E T T A R T A R

H N E D E S L E T H D E A P L E N L E M A O T H O U A U N O N C D L K H U E S L T B Y A G E A F B F R I E S S T D T S P O N O P E S S E T

H A R H E T H A E B U L A M O T Y T B O E G A N S A N D T S E E C M A N K O A D O B B D O C T N O U N D S A P R I T E R D E R O I R E W O A C

A N G E L O S A R I

R E E B O K S

A C T I O R N U N D F A O N R L

R O N C L E O U N S M T H E E S T H

A G E G R O X A S O C I G E N A L E H E D E E A M I C R N O T I F T H N E S S I R H C S O E T T E U P S A R D F L E A A S G A R T I N G E O N O R

A N A T

P A L S

A D O R E

D O N E N

E Y R E

F A S T

S T E R E

H O R S E


Your BEST FRIEND is waiting for YOU!

CHRISSY

1.5-year-old beautiful Lab mix female. Loves to cuddle, super affectionate. Gets along with other dogs, but is also possessive around people and is a bit food/toy aggressive with other dogs. A great dog!

BELLINA

Happy, friendly, 2-year-old pretty Cattle Dog mix. Gets along well with adults, kids + other pets. Very sweet personality. Has a slightly deformed shaky front leg but her limp doesn’t slow her down at all. Born in Mexico.

ALLIE

2.5-year-old Cattle Dog mix female. Fun-loving, highenergy. Loves people. Can sometimes be dominant with other dogs but seems fine with many other shelter dogs. Knows some commands.

SAM

Strong, energetic, black/white 5-yearold female Boston Terrier mix with a splash of Pit Bull so she is larger than a typical Boston. Outgoing and friendly. Might be best as only pet.

PRINCESS

Happy, friendly, 8-year-old Pit Bull mix. Has lived with Lupita for the past four years. It would be great if they could be adopted together but they don’t have to be.

13 y a y, M pm a d Sun 0am-4 1

LUPITA

Good-looking, affectionate 11-year-old Chow/ Husky mix. Has lived with Princess for the past four years. It would be great if they could be adopted together but they don’t have to be.

MOTHER’S DAY BRUNCH $25 ADULTS | $15 KIDS 12 & UNDER

ESTHER

Cute, blue- and redcolored, 2-year-old Australian Shepherd/Cattle Dog mix found living on her own in Aspen Village. We named her Esther. Wary of strangers at first, but then affectionate once she knows you.

BEAR

Large, friendly, 8-year-old Mastiff male. Gets along well with everybody, but occasionally picks fights with other dogs possibly due to fading eyesight.All in all, a very cool dog.

LILA

1-year-old female domestic short-hair tabby mix. Very playful and affectionate. Best as only pet. Please call the shelter for more information.

OPEN 7am-6pm EVERY DAY 970.544.0206

MAYA

Sweet, pretty 2-year-old Staffy mix female. Athletic + affectionate. Needs a responsible, active knowledgeable home.

CLEO

Beautiful, friendly, soft-spoken 9-year-old Husky mix female. She is a retired sled dog looking for a loving home. Outgoing with people.

TIANA

Beautiful, happy, friendly, sablecolored, 4-year-old German Shepherd female who gets along well with people and other pets.

Lots of CATS AND DOGS! See dogsaspen.com for more animals.

CURLY

SARGE

7-year-old male Rottweiler. Friendly + sweet. Great with other dogs. Loves people. Perfect except for severe separation anxiety. Would do best in a home with another dog and constant companionship. Ask staff for info.

INCLUDES COFFEE/JUICE, DONUT MUFFIN AND YOUR CHOICE OF:

a Eggs Benedict and fresh fruit a Frittata made with locally-grown spring vegetables a Corned Beef Hash with farm fresh eggs a Kids plate: eggs and pancakes with bacon More delectable brunch and lunch items to choose from.

ROCCO

Gentle, affectionate, 5-year-old, tancolored, Alaskan Husky who gets along well with people and other dogs. He was bred to be a sled dog and has even competed in a 100-mile race!

Older neutered male Boxer/Pitbull/Lab. Roughly 11 years old. Found in Emma on 12/9 and never claimed. Super sweet old man.

PLUS A COMPLIMENTARY MIMOSA OR SPARKLING WINE FOR MOMS!

Aspen/Pitkin Animal Shelter 101 Animal Shelter Road

www.dogsaspen.com

Clean Energy Economy for the Region (CLEER) presents:

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43


CHAFFIN LIGHT

& Morris & Fyrwald

CRAIG MORRIS 970.379.9795 Cell 970.429.1090 Office Craig.Morris@sothebysrealty.com

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6 bedrooms, 6 full, 2 half baths 9,307 sq ft home on 3.56 acres Overlooking 1,400 acres in Lazy O Ranch Just 14 miles to the Aspen roundabout Brand new top of the line finishes Dramatic log features Billiards room, wine room, & theater Privacy and exceptional views Pond/water feature, mature landscaping Common horse pasture and barn Ranch hand on site 24/7 Flexible & creative owner financing available

$7,450,000 $4,490,000 Co-listed with Stephannie Messina | 970.274.2474 New Listing

French-Inspired Mountain Home

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6 bedrooms, 6 full, 4 half baths, 6,815 sq ft Master suite with incredible views Comfort, elegance and master craftsmanship Just four minutes to the central core $14,875,000 $10,875,000 Co-listed with Carol Hood | 970.379.0676

6 en suite bedrooms + 3 half baths 6,792 sq ft in an irreplaceable location Media room, exercise room, bar, wine room Aspen Mountain views, 2 car garage $10,990,000 $8,750,000 Furnished

The Lodge at Morningstar 6 bedrooms, 6 full, 2 half baths, 8,196 sq ft 8 fireplaces, 1,000 bottle wine room Fantastic theater, 3 car garage Hot tub, grill, ample outdoor living spaces $12,950,000 $7,995,000 Furnished

New Listing

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